I've addressed this more in the "Bad to be Rich" thread. Here are a few additional thoughts:
And I think that's wrong. I paid about $40k in taxes last year after it was all said and done. A huge chunk of that money went directly into the pockets of people who, like me, have access to infrastructure and protection of the law. The problem is that they are using all of these things and, not only not paying for them, but they are being paid for their troubles. That is the problem here. You want me to pay taxes for infrastructure? Fine and dandy. You want me to pay more than someone else because I make more money and, one could argue, utilize more of these commonly-available resources? I might be able to swallow that. You want me to pay a metric buttload while other people pay absolutely nothing, then turn over even more to subsidize their lack of contribution? Now we have a problem.
To set the record straight yet again, most of those people are also paying a buttload of taxes, especially in proportion to their actual disposable income. They simply aren't paying federal income taxes. It is a critical distinction that many seem to miss.
You can argue that life isn't fair, but this is unjust, which is a lot worse. If I go to Vegas, I want the dice to be fair. If I go to pay my taxes, I want the laws to be just. Justice is never served by forcefully taking my money and handing it to someone else. I can do that of my own free will if I wish, but using the government as an agent to accomplish that is unequivocally unjust.
That's a valid point, I agree. I can accept people having their federal withholding refunded in some circumstances. It's hard for me to justify giving some people more than they actually paid in. For whatever good intentions may be behind it, it's the wrong mechanism.
But the vast majority of taxes aren't paying for infrastructure improvements.
Agree somewhat. I think you're defining infrastructure much too narrowly. For example, I believe Defense is reasonably part of that "extraordinary physical, financial, and educational infrastructure" I often laud. I agree much tax money goes to other purposes, some serving society, some serving special interests, and some just poured down the drain.
But the price isn't fixed. On a whim, my taxes can double or triple with no additional benefit. I'm hardly a policy expert, but thinking about this for 30 seconds leads me to at least two superior methods for collecting taxes to pay for infrastructure:
1. collect based on use (i.e. pay tolls for miles driven - easily done without tracking my every movement by simply collecting it with property tax every year based on the mileage on the car), or
2. collect an equal amount from everyone (based on the idea that everyone has equal access to infrastructure, which is likely untrue, making #1 the obviously superior alternative).
I address this more in the other thread. I will point out that we already do #1 in some cases, including a toll for miles driven. It is collected indirectly, however, via the tax on gasoline. The advantage of this approach is that vehicle weight dramatically affects the wear and tear on roads. Heavier vehicles tend to consume more gasoline, making a gasoline tax a means of measuring both mileage and weight.
Unfortunately, this metered use approach would become overwhelmingly complicated if we tried to apply it to all government goods and services. It is far more practical to simply pool the cost over taxpayers in general, much like insurance pools risk. Otherwise, the IRS would need 300 million employees to precisely track all the goods and services used.
The problem is that there is no fair return on human investment. To think that you are due a return because I drove down your street on my way to class every day is slavery of the individual to society. When society imposes a burden of this type on certain individuals but not others, the system is unjust. Will you demand cash from non-taxpayers who want to drive down your street? If not, then your argument is nothing but an appeal to emotion: you simply feel sorry for one segment of society and use that as a weapon against the rest. My paying taxes is my stock in society, not the other way around. Those who have no stock in society keep receiving dividend checks from my checkbook. They are free to run society into the ground because its decreased value has no bearing on their bottom line.
I believe I've addressed this above and in the other thread. If you feel I've missed a key point (as opposed to just generally thinking I'm an idiot ;-). please call it out.
I will try to get back to that thread. I have been traveling a ton and miss a few days here and there. If a thread has a hundred new posts since my last one, I usually give up and move on.
I hear you. My own access is spotty. At the moment, I really need to get off my ass and head to the office. Otherwise I may become one of the subsidized instead of a subsidizer.