Paying for "government" vs. paying for goods in the private sector

Dissipate

Diamond Member
Jan 17, 2004
6,815
0
0
Let's suppose you walk into a baker's shop. You go up to the counter and you order a dozen donuts. After selecting your fine donuts and after the baker has finished putting them in a box, you go up to the cash register and the baker rings up your total. Before the baker has even announced your total you notice something bizarre. On the cash register there is a % sign instead of a dollar sign. Then a few seconds later the baker announces: "That will be .0001%." Your jaw drops. ".0001% of what?!"" you ask. ".0001% of your total income for the year, of course." The baker says. "Come into the room in the back, we can process your bank statements and transactions for the year and get you out of here in no time." The baker says. "You are crazy! I'm going to another donut shop!" you exclaim. Then you leave the shop shaking your head.

Now, let's talk about payment for the "government." Payment for the "government" is exactly what happened in the scenario of the baker's shop, except the percentage for a lot of people is much larger and you cannot escape the extortion....oops I mean *cough* transaction *cough* by just walking out of a shop. For those who believe that the "government" is just another service industry in the "public sector," please explain the rational, philosophical and economical basis for paying for it on a percentage basis. If you can explain this to me without sounding completely insane, I'll give you a gold star.
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
0
Do you want every man woman and child to pay a flat $8K tax?
Or what exactly are you b!tching about?
 

Zebo

Elite Member
Jul 29, 2001
39,398
19
81
Simple. At it's most basic level Bill Gates has more to protect than you do, therefore pays a higher premium for that protection, just like any kind of insurance. If you want to get into nuances of how much Bill's company benefits from having a publically educated workforce, a vast tranportation infastructure and legal system vs. you get from those benefits we can do that too, but the numbers are harder to pin down, but I assure you his business would only be possible in one of these % taxed countries.


you cannot escape the extortion....oops I mean *cough* transaction *cough* by just walking out of a shop.

Sure you can. Walk accross the Rio Grande, mexicans do it everyday the other way. But if you want to live here you have to abide by the rules. Taxation is no more "extortion," than imprisonment is "kidnapping," killing enemy soldiers in war is "murder," or other laws compelling compliance on pain of fine or imprisonment are "extortion." If you catch someone breaking the law, you have no individual right to lock him in your basement for some period of time, or to form a "necktie party." Such rights are exclusive to the government -- proving that the government has rights, you don't.

As for the federal government's specific power to tax, it is found in Article I Section 8, where the Congress is given the right to "lay and collect taxes . . . to pay the debts, and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States." The government provides a vast array of services and infrastructure such as roads, schools, the banking system, port facilities, air traffic control, hydroelectric dams, communications satellites, R&D into a vast array of technologies such as radar and semiconductors -- not to mention the most basic functions of establishing and vindicating your basic commercial rights in property and contracts.

In other words, your "hard earned money" wasn't earned in a vacuum. You aren't Robinson Crusoe -- as proven by the fact that you don't live like he did. The commercial enterprise where you work -- or that you own, as the case may be -- operates within a society that has a vast public infrastructure that someone has to pay for. But of course, that vast public infrastructure also creates vast opportunities such that the taxes you pay reap you tremendous returns. The proof of that is the fact that the twenty wealthiest nations on earth -- as measured by per capita GDP -- all have an extensive public sector. Every one of them.

"Minimalist government" countries, with low taxes and little public investment in infrastructure and government services, are impoverished cesspools -- except for a handful of wealthy elites.

Go right ahead, open your waffer plant down in Panama. After your un-succesful VC call, your non-existant government backed loan, your joke of a stock market then try and find educated employees to crank out waffers AMD is waiting on. Best of luck.
 

Bowfinger

Lifer
Nov 17, 2002
15,776
392
126
Originally posted by: Zebo
Simple. At it's most basic level Bill Gates has more to protect than you do, therefore pays a higher premium for that protection, just like any kind of insurance. If you want to get into nuances of how much Bill's company benefits from having a publically educated workforce, a vast tranportation infastructure and legal system vs. you get from those benefits we can do that too, but the numbers are harder to pin down, but I assure you his business would only be possible in one of these % taxed countries.


you cannot escape the extortion....oops I mean *cough* transaction *cough* by just walking out of a shop.

Sure you can. Walk accross the Rio Grande, mexicans do it everyday the other way. But if you want to live here you have to abide by the rules. Taxation is no more "extortion," than imprisonment is "kidnapping," killing enemy soldiers in war is "murder," or other laws compelling compliance on pain of fine or imprisonment are "extortion." If you catch someone breaking the law, you have no individual right to lock him in your basement for some period of time, or to form a "necktie party." Such rights are exclusive to the government -- proving that the government has rights, you don't.

As for the federal government's specific power to tax, it is found in Article I Section 8, where the Congress is given the right to "lay and collect taxes . . . to pay the debts, and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States." The government provides a vast array of services and infrastructure such as roads, schools, the banking system, port facilities, air traffic control, hydroelectric dams, communications satellites, R&D into a vast array of technologies such as radar and semiconductors -- not to mention the most basic functions of establishing and vindicating your basic commercial rights in property and contracts.

In other words, your "hard earned money" wasn't earned in a vacuum. You aren't Robinson Crusoe -- as proven by the fact that you don't live like he did. The commercial enterprise where you work -- or that you own, as the case may be -- operates within a society that has a vast public infrastructure that someone has to pay for. But of course, that vast public infrastructure also creates vast opportunities such that the taxes you pay reap you tremendous returns. The proof of that is the fact that the twenty wealthiest nations on earth -- as measured by per capita GDP -- all have an extensive public sector. Every one of them.

"Minimalist government" countries, with low taxes and little public investment in infrastructure and government services, are impoverished cesspools -- except for a handful of wealthy elites.

Go right ahead, open your waffer plant down in Panama. After your un-succesful VC call, your non-existant government backed loan, your joke of a stock market then try and find educated employees to crank out waffers AMD is waiting on. Best of luck.
:thumbsup: Very well said. :thumbsup:
 

PatboyX

Diamond Member
Aug 10, 2001
7,024
0
0
perhaps if that baker were responsible for all the things zebo points out, i wouldnt whine when it came time to pay up.
or maybe i would just leave the country. (someone here has to appriciate the hilarity of zebo's suggestion to leave the country in context of the demands that upset liberals were told to "move to canada/france" because they want some change.)
 

Mursilis

Diamond Member
Mar 11, 2001
7,756
11
81
Originally posted by: PatboyX
perhaps if that baker were responsible for all the things zebo points out, i wouldnt whine when it came time to pay up.
or maybe i would just leave the country. (someone here has to appriciate the hilarity of zebo's suggestion to leave the country in context of the demands that upset liberals were told to "move to canada/france" because they want some change.)

I saw the humor in it - "Progressive taxation - Love it or leave, radical!!" :laugh:
 

daveshel

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
5,453
2
81
I have long been in favor of a services analysis for government, but it generally depresses me that I get such a lousy deal for my services dollar.
 

cKGunslinger

Lifer
Nov 29, 1999
16,408
57
91
Originally posted by: Zebo
Simple. At it's most basic level Bill Gates has more to protect than you do, therefore pays a higher premium for that protection, just like any kind of insurance. If you want to get into nuances of how much Bill's company benefits from having a publically educated workforce, a vast tranportation infastructure and legal system vs. you get from those benefits we can do that too, but the numbers are harder to pin down, but I assure you his business would only be possible in one of these % taxed countries.


you cannot escape the extortion....oops I mean *cough* transaction *cough* by just walking out of a shop.

Sure you can. Walk accross the Rio Grande, mexicans do it everyday the other way. But if you want to live here you have to abide by the rules. Taxation is no more "extortion," than imprisonment is "kidnapping," killing enemy soldiers in war is "murder," or other laws compelling compliance on pain of fine or imprisonment are "extortion." If you catch someone breaking the law, you have no individual right to lock him in your basement for some period of time, or to form a "necktie party." Such rights are exclusive to the government -- proving that the government has rights, you don't.

As for the federal government's specific power to tax, it is found in Article I Section 8, where the Congress is given the right to "lay and collect taxes . . . to pay the debts, and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States." The government provides a vast array of services and infrastructure such as roads, schools, the banking system, port facilities, air traffic control, hydroelectric dams, communications satellites, R&D into a vast array of technologies such as radar and semiconductors -- not to mention the most basic functions of establishing and vindicating your basic commercial rights in property and contracts.

In other words, your "hard earned money" wasn't earned in a vacuum. You aren't Robinson Crusoe -- as proven by the fact that you don't live like he did. The commercial enterprise where you work -- or that you own, as the case may be -- operates within a society that has a vast public infrastructure that someone has to pay for. But of course, that vast public infrastructure also creates vast opportunities such that the taxes you pay reap you tremendous returns. The proof of that is the fact that the twenty wealthiest nations on earth -- as measured by per capita GDP -- all have an extensive public sector. Every one of them.

"Minimalist government" countries, with low taxes and little public investment in infrastructure and government services, are impoverished cesspools -- except for a handful of wealthy elites.

Go right ahead, open your waffer plant down in Panama. After your un-succesful VC call, your non-existant government backed loan, your joke of a stock market then try and find educated employees to crank out waffers AMD is waiting on. Best of luck.

Nicely said. I'm a Libertarian myslef, but I don't buy into the extreme anarchist views of an infinitesimal small or non-existant government.

Sure, keep government small and out of the private lives of individuals, but don't put the damn thing on life support.
 

Kibbo

Platinum Member
Jul 13, 2004
2,847
0
0
Dissipate,

Your model falls apart if you abandon the idea that government is there primarily to provide a product.
 

trevinom

Golden Member
Sep 19, 2003
1,061
0
0
What really gets me is the difference in money paid through the federal income tax.
How can any sane citizen think correct a system that forces a person earning 50k to 5k in taxes, where a person earning a million also pays 5k in taxes. (so the figures might be a bit off, but you get the gest)

 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
3
0
Let's tax the first $50k or so the same for everyone. Is that going to solve things? No. That just puts a much harder burden on the person who only earns $50k...or even less. They will pay a greater portion of their income. And what's leftover just goes to cover the essentials of life (rent/mortgage, food, health care, transportation, education, etc.)

Now, that person making $500,000/yr...or even $50 million/yr, is it fair to tax that person a higher % of his/her income simply because they can afford to do so? No. But, the state of our country tosses that aside because our government is a HUGE entity and it requires a huge revenue stream to provde the services it currently does (including an incredibly costly military.)

So, what should be done about it? Cut budgets across the board by some % each year until the size of the government is down a level such that a more fair tax system can be enacted? That may work and it may not work. Perhaps cut federal funding of education and the military but leave federally funded welfare (but modified to a graduated system to cut off benefits after 2-3 years or once the recipient has achieved a self-sufficient income level.) Perhaps cut all regulation budgets (ax the EPA) and save money that way and rely on the corporations to do the right thing and protect the environment above bolstering their bottom line. Neither of those is ideal. Some mix involving those and other options will be required. Are our current elected leaders going to even begin approaching this? No freakin' way.
 

NJDevil

Senior member
Jun 10, 2002
952
0
0
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Let's suppose you walk into a baker's shop. You go up to the counter and you order a dozen donuts. After selecting your fine donuts and after the baker has finished putting them in a box, you go up to the cash register and the baker rings up your total. Before the baker has even announced your total you notice something bizarre. On the cash register there is a % sign instead of a dollar sign. Then a few seconds later the baker announces: "That will be .0001%." Your jaw drops. ".0001% of what?!"" you ask. ".0001% of your total income for the year, of course." The baker says. "Come into the room in the back, we can process your bank statements and transactions for the year and get you out of here in no time." The baker says. "You are crazy! I'm going to another donut shop!" you exclaim. Then you leave the shop shaking your head.

Now, let's talk about payment for the "government." Payment for the "government" is exactly what happened in the scenario of the baker's shop, except the percentage for a lot of people is much larger and you cannot escape the extortion....oops I mean *cough* transaction *cough* by just walking out of a shop. For those who believe that the "government" is just another service industry in the "public sector," please explain the rational, philosophical and economical basis for paying for it on a percentage basis. If you can explain this to me without sounding completely insane, I'll give you a gold star.

It seems like the people here have explained very well what you asked them to. Now about that gold star you owe them :).

Well done Zebo!
 

Orsorum

Lifer
Dec 26, 2001
27,631
5
81
Originally posted by: trevinom
What really gets me is the difference in money paid through the federal income tax.
How can any sane citizen think correct a system that forces a person earning 50k to 5k in taxes, where a person earning a million also pays 5k in taxes. (so the figures might be a bit off, but you get the gest)

AMT anyone?
 

Dissipate

Diamond Member
Jan 17, 2004
6,815
0
0
Originally posted by: NJDevil
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Let's suppose you walk into a baker's shop. You go up to the counter and you order a dozen donuts. After selecting your fine donuts and after the baker has finished putting them in a box, you go up to the cash register and the baker rings up your total. Before the baker has even announced your total you notice something bizarre. On the cash register there is a % sign instead of a dollar sign. Then a few seconds later the baker announces: "That will be .0001%." Your jaw drops. ".0001% of what?!"" you ask. ".0001% of your total income for the year, of course." The baker says. "Come into the room in the back, we can process your bank statements and transactions for the year and get you out of here in no time." The baker says. "You are crazy! I'm going to another donut shop!" you exclaim. Then you leave the shop shaking your head.

Now, let's talk about payment for the "government." Payment for the "government" is exactly what happened in the scenario of the baker's shop, except the percentage for a lot of people is much larger and you cannot escape the extortion....oops I mean *cough* transaction *cough* by just walking out of a shop. For those who believe that the "government" is just another service industry in the "public sector," please explain the rational, philosophical and economical basis for paying for it on a percentage basis. If you can explain this to me without sounding completely insane, I'll give you a gold star.

It seems like the people here have explained very well what you asked them to. Now about that gold star you owe them :).

Well done Zebo!

You really think so? If that is the best the authoritarians can come up with, I'm afraid that political philosophy and the entire theoretical foundation for the modern state is dead.

Edit: BTW, I am glad you have committed yourself to his arguments, because I am about to shoot them to sh!t. Oh wait, they are already basically one pile of sh!t to begin with. If anyone else would like to announce their belief in his arguments, please do so now. Taking down more than one more person at a time makes for greater efficiency.
 

Dissipate

Diamond Member
Jan 17, 2004
6,815
0
0
Originally posted by: Zebo
Simple. At it's most basic level Bill Gates has more to protect than you do, therefore pays a higher premium for that protection, just like any kind of insurance.

Bill Gates is terrible example. Bill Gates' entire fortune is basically based on state imposed copyright/patent protection on software. Hence, in this case I agree. Since Bill Gates owes his entire super-rich lifestyle to the government, I have no qualms in saying that I don't give a damn that Bill Gates pay taxes, especially a percentage.

If you want to get into nuances of how much Bill's company benefits from having a publically educated workforce, a vast tranportation infastructure and legal system vs. you get from those benefits we can do that too, but the numbers are harder to pin down, but I assure you his business would only be possible in one of these % taxed countries.

A publically educated workforce?!! Hahahahaha. That's a good one. I spent 18 years of my life in public schools, and I can honestly say that it was almost a complete waste of my time. If I owned a company and someone offered me a publically educated workforce, I would show them the door and tell them to never come back. However, Bill Gates certainly did benefit from living in a brainwashed society full of worshippers of political demagogues, telling them that copying CDs is against the law.


you cannot escape the extortion....oops I mean *cough* transaction *cough* by just walking out of a shop.

Sure you can. Walk accross the Rio Grande, mexicans do it everyday the other way. But if you want to live here you have to abide by the rules. Taxation is no more "extortion," than imprisonment is "kidnapping," killing enemy soldiers in war is "murder," or other laws compelling compliance on pain of fine or imprisonment are "extortion." If you catch someone breaking the law, you have no individual right to lock him in your basement for some period of time, or to form a "necktie party." Such rights are exclusive to the government -- proving that the government has rights, you don't.

Your entire 'argument' begs the question by assuming that the government is a legitimate entity in the first place. In reality, democracy and politics in general is an ad hoc and artificially created system that has no tenable theoretical basis.

Rights that are exclusive to the government? Interesting. You are essentially saying that the government consists of individuals who wield super-human absolute authority. If those in government possess super-human absolute authority, where did they get it from? If I do not have it, how could have I or anyone else given it to them? Supposedly their 'right to rule' is granted by deluded inviduals going into voting booths, but from where I am standing that is nothing more than a cult ritual akin to rain dances and throwing coins into a well for good luck. You have proven nothing, except that you are very bad at tricking people with circular logic.


As for the federal government's specific power to tax, it is found in Article I Section 8, where the Congress is given the right to "lay and collect taxes . . . to pay the debts, and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States."

The Constitution was a document signed by men who have been dead for hundreds of years. To me it is nothing more than a historical document. I would have to be deluded to think that it binds me in any way.

The government provides a vast array of services and infrastructure such as roads, schools, the banking system, port facilities, air traffic control, hydroelectric dams, communications satellites, R&D into a vast array of technologies such as radar and semiconductors -- not to mention the most basic functions of establishing and vindicating your basic commercial rights in property and contracts.

Wow, a 'vast array' of demagoguery. Of course they 'provide' a 'vast array' of sh!t. Not only does that allow them to make it look like they are actually providing some kind of service, but at the same time it allows them to expand their bureaurcracies and power. The banking system is a complete fraud based on banks that do not even have enough paper, let alone any kind of precious metal. My basic commercial rights in property and contracts? That's interesting, the last time I checked the government was the largest violator of private property rights around.

In other words, your "hard earned money" wasn't earned in a vacuum. You aren't Robinson Crusoe -- as proven by the fact that you don't live like he did.

Who said anything about a vacuum? Coercion does not have to precede cooperation.

The commercial enterprise where you work -- or that you own, as the case may be -- operates within a society that has a vast public infrastructure that someone has to pay for. But of course, that vast public infrastructure also creates vast opportunities such that the taxes you pay reap you tremendous returns.

By the sound of it, I would have thought you were a minarchist. Infrastructure this, infrastructure that. The truth of the matter is that this 'infrastructure' B.S. you talk about is a fraction of total government expenditures. The majority of outlays now are just welfare and warfare. However, I don't think minarchy is what you are arguing, so I will just point out the disingenuous nature of your post here and leave it at that.

The proof of that is the fact that the twenty wealthiest nations on earth -- as measured by per capita GDP -- all have an extensive public sector. Every one of them.

First of all, there is no such thing as the 'public sector.' What people call the 'public sector' is really just a government racket. The fact that the twenty wealthiest nations on Earth have extensive government rackets just goes to show that politics is one of the most practiced religions on Earth. That's all. It says nothing about what would happen if there was one day a widespread disbelief in this religion.

"Minimalist government" countries, with low taxes and little public investment in infrastructure and government services, are impoverished cesspools -- except for a handful of wealthy elites.

Their governments are smaller just because they have less to loot to begin with.

Go right ahead, open your waffer plant down in Panama. After your un-succesful VC call, your non-existant government backed loan, your joke of a stock market then try and find educated employees to crank out waffers AMD is waiting on. Best of luck.

Good luck finding your elite 'publically educated workforce.'

 

OS

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
15,581
1
76
dissipate,

You're smoking cock. Half of your arguments are bunch of worthless tirades.

Why don't you put your ass where your big ass mouth is, build a big ass raft, float it out and live in absolute freedom. No one is forcing you to stay in the US.
 

trevinom

Golden Member
Sep 19, 2003
1,061
0
0
Dissipate,
Anarchy is based on no government, but without government you have no protection from others. How can you live in a society with no government to create, and enforce rules set by those that are part of that society? You are correct in saying that
The Constitution was a document signed by men who have been dead for hundreds of years.
but although dead, these men created this document to serve as a foundation for how the rule of law by goverment should work. We ARE goverment. The people who go into voting booths decide, through majority voting, what they want to set as their rules for living in that society.
You can disagree with the need for government but you can't disagree with the need for interaction with others. Without people, you cannot exist, because your existence is based on others. In order to live with others, you need rules that tell you what is proper for all those involved, and what is not and how to proceed when those 'rules' are broken. In it's simplest form, government is the basis for that existence. A natural growth of government is to provide for it's member, thus you start with the basics and grow from there, the older the goverment, the more rules, agencies, power is added, based on the politicians perceived needs. Without you, there is no government, but without government, there is no 'you'.
So, your so-called arguments that you used against Conjur do not stand up when exposed for what they are, just meaningless jabs without substance.

 

jer0608

Member
Sep 24, 2004
96
0
0
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Originally posted by: Zebo
Simple. At it's most basic level Bill Gates has more to protect than you do, therefore pays a higher premium for that protection, just like any kind of insurance.

Bill Gates is terrible example. Bill Gates' entire fortune is basically based on state imposed copyright/patent protection on software. Hence, in this case I agree. Since Bill Gates owes his entire super-rich lifestyle to the government, I have no qualms in saying that I don't give a damn that Bill Gates pay taxes, especially a percentage.

This is a blatant misdirection of the argument put forth by Zebo. You have focused on a questionable interpretation of the details of the life of his example. You have done nothing to refute the position that the wealthiest individuals, as a whole, have more to lose from lack of government protection. That argument remains unscathed.

If you want to get into nuances of how much Bill's company benefits from having a publically educated workforce, a vast tranportation infastructure and legal system vs. you get from those benefits we can do that too, but the numbers are harder to pin down, but I assure you his business would only be possible in one of these % taxed countries.

A publically educated workforce?!! Hahahahaha. That's a good one. I spent 18 years of my life in public schools, and I can honestly say that it was almost a complete waste of my time. If I owned a company and someone offered me a publically educated workforce, I would show them the door and tell them to never come back. However, Bill Gates certainly did benefit from living in a brainwashed society full of worshippers of political demagogues, telling them that copying CDs is against the law.

Ummm...for all intents and purposes, the entire US workforce is publicly educated. Are you proposing that, as a company owner, you would refuse to hire publicly educated individuals? Good luck filling out your workforce. If you do, good luck managing those payroll costs.

Methinks you have again misdirected the argument because it is easier to bash public education than to address the valid points of the original poster.



you cannot escape the extortion....oops I mean *cough* transaction *cough* by just walking out of a shop.

Sure you can. Walk accross the Rio Grande, mexicans do it everyday the other way. But if you want to live here you have to abide by the rules. Taxation is no more "extortion," than imprisonment is "kidnapping," killing enemy soldiers in war is "murder," or other laws compelling compliance on pain of fine or imprisonment are "extortion." If you catch someone breaking the law, you have no individual right to lock him in your basement for some period of time, or to form a "necktie party." Such rights are exclusive to the government -- proving that the government has rights, you don't.

Your entire 'argument' begs the question by assuming that the government is a legitimate entity in the first place. In reality, democracy and politics in general is an ad hoc and artificially created system that has no tenable theoretical basis.

You're absolutely right that government is an ad hoc and artificially created system. However, there is a legitimate theoretical basis for its existence. By grouping together to form an entity more powerful than any given individual, you provide a mechanism whereby the weakest members of society are not inevitably preyed upon by the stronger. Since relative strength and weakness are highly dynamic, it is in everyone's best interest to embrace some form of rule. Now, the extent of government necessary to accomplish this in a complicated society, where human beings continually develop new ways to prey on one another, is debatable

Rights that are exclusive to the government? Interesting. You are essentially saying that the government consists of individuals who wield super-human absolute authority. If those in government possess super-human absolute authority, where did they get it from? If I do not have it, how could have I or anyone else given it to them? Supposedly their 'right to rule' is granted by deluded inviduals going into voting booths, but from where I am standing that is nothing more than a cult ritual akin to rain dances and throwing coins into a well for good luck. You have proven nothing, except that you are very bad at tricking people with circular logic.

Rights are "granted" to a democratic government because a significant portion of the population enters into an unwritten social contract wherein they bestow some of their otherwise individual rights to the group in exchange for protection (in whatever form it takes).



As for the federal government's specific power to tax, it is found in Article I Section 8, where the Congress is given the right to "lay and collect taxes . . . to pay the debts, and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States."

The Constitution was a document signed by men who have been dead for hundreds of years. To me it is nothing more than a historical document. I would have to be deluded to think that it binds me in any way.

The Constitiution binds you in the sense that the government that it has established has the might, for want of a better word, to enforce it's provisions. If you do not wish to be bound by it, you can break the social contract and not partake in the benefits our government provides. Note that this includes the market system that US society has enabled. If you wish to take advantage of that market system to make "money", then you are reaping the benefits of government. You are then obligated to upheld your end of the contract which, in our system, includes paying taxes.

The government provides a vast array of services and infrastructure such as roads, schools, the banking system, port facilities, air traffic control, hydroelectric dams, communications satellites, R&D into a vast array of technologies such as radar and semiconductors -- not to mention the most basic functions of establishing and vindicating your basic commercial rights in property and contracts.

Wow, a 'vast array' of demagoguery. Of course they 'provide' a 'vast array' of sh!t. Not only does that allow them to make it look like they are actually providing some kind of service, but at the same time it allows them to expand their bureaurcracies and power. The banking system is a complete fraud based on banks that do not even have enough paper, let alone any kind of precious metal. My basic commercial rights in property and contracts? That's interesting, the last time I checked the government was the largest violator of private property rights around.

Again, you are addressing flaws in the current system, not the fundamental concepts of government and taxation. Those remain unrefuted.

In other words, your "hard earned money" wasn't earned in a vacuum. You aren't Robinson Crusoe -- as proven by the fact that you don't live like he did.

Who said anything about a vacuum? Coercion does not have to precede cooperation.

The commercial enterprise where you work -- or that you own, as the case may be -- operates within a society that has a vast public infrastructure that someone has to pay for. But of course, that vast public infrastructure also creates vast opportunities such that the taxes you pay reap you tremendous returns.

By the sound of it, I would have thought you were a minarchist. Infrastructure this, infrastructure that. The truth of the matter is that this 'infrastructure' B.S. you talk about is a fraction of total government expenditures. The majority of outlays now are just welfare and warfare. However, I don't think minarchy is what you are arguing, so I will just point out the disingenuous nature of your post here and leave it at that.

More "nitpicking" about the current system, not the fundamental concepts. You can certainly disagree with how the government uses your tax dollars. But I thought we were discussing the right to take them.

The proof of that is the fact that the twenty wealthiest nations on earth -- as measured by per capita GDP -- all have an extensive public sector. Every one of them.

First of all, there is no such thing as the 'public sector.' What people call the 'public sector' is really just a government racket. The fact that the twenty wealthiest nations on Earth have extensive government rackets just goes to show that politics is one of the most practiced religions on Earth. That's all. It says nothing about what would happen if there was one day a widespread disbelief in this religion.

For all its corruption and bloat (again, details of implementation), the infrastructure provides its citizens with numerous protections and enables the market economy that wealthy individuals so enjoy.

"Minimalist government" countries, with low taxes and little public investment in infrastructure and government services, are impoverished cesspools -- except for a handful of wealthy elites.

Their governments are smaller just because they have less to loot to begin with.

Go right ahead, open your waffer plant down in Panama. After your un-succesful VC call, your non-existant government backed loan, your joke of a stock market then try and find educated employees to crank out waffers AMD is waiting on. Best of luck.

Good luck finding your elite 'publically educated workforce.'

 

Kibbo

Platinum Member
Jul 13, 2004
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Dissipate, that was a weak response.

First, you pose a question that was framed poorly. Then, you just snort at the best response; you didn't even put forth an argument. You're slipping, man.

When a radical position is proposed, it beholden on you to put forth an argument. You are looking at the best method of social organization ever realized on a large scale. The social democratic state is the best system history has ever allowed to survive. It's up to you to show what could be better.

Lay out a bare bones system. Tell us what problems it would solve. Tell us what it's flaws are, what the costs would be. Tell which problems it would solve. Tell us which it would ignore. Tell us what problems would arise. Give us an inkling as to how we could move in that direction. Give us a friggin' discussion, man.

Edit: it seems you have improved your post. I'd still like you to throw up a quicky plan one of these days.