ldrews, on 2018-July-29, 07:27, said:
You are right, I believe that all taxation is legalized theft. It is extracting money from non-consenting individuals through the use or threat of us of force. Isn't that theft? The fact that it is authorized by law simply makes it legal. Hence, legalized theft.
I would be interested in hearing an example of a government action that doesn't advantage some individual or group and disadvantage another individual or group. Can you supply one?
I will take these one at a time.
" all taxation is legalized theft". Technically, this seems like an oxymoron. If it is legalized, it isn't theft. It's not my purpose tom play with words here, but could we just call it taxation? I believe taxation is a good idea, you are opposed to all taxation. We disagree. Most Libertarians are not in fact opposed to all taxation, they acknowledge the need for defense and that has to be paid for. Whatever your views on that, certainly I am far more in favor of taxation than you are. I'll indicate why as I move on to the second statement.
"I would be interested in hearing an example of a government action that doesn't advantage some individual or group and disadvantage another individual or group. Can you supply one?" Certainly government action advantages certain groups. That is it's purpose. Much of what I will now say I, and probably many others, have said before. I went to public elementary and secondary school, supported by taxes. I then went to the University of Minnesota, where the tuition was something like $72 per quarter, later going up to $84. Taxpayers made this possible. This was a great advantage to me. Now I dd not prove the Riemann Hypothesis, but I led a reasonably productive life. So maybe there was some benefit to society. For that matter, Sergei Brin went to the tax payer supported Eleanor Roosevelt High School, significantly increasing the average wealth of its graduates. Many people went to tax payer supported schools, and often this has worked out well for everyone concerned.
Tax money can be wasted, no doubt about that. And it can lead to corrupt practices, no doubt about that either. For me, this means that we do our best to bring out the good that can be done, and do ourr best to keep the bad features as minimal as possible.
Obama said "You didn't build this", an extremely clumsy formulation. But I sincerely believe that anyone who looks back on his life and cannot find places where help, sometimes from the government and sometimes from others, has been not only useful but often essential needs to look a little harder.
So yes, I support taxation. I have known people who do not. I cannot recall a single instance where something that I have said has changed their mind, but the fact is I do support it. That does not mean that we should not be careful, but I support taxation. This is both in appreciation for what I believe has been beneficial to me and to what I believe has been beneficial to society as a whole. I don't expect to change your mind, but anyway this is my view. Rather broadly shared, I think. I am not all that original.