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A group of 10 people were stranded on a very large island due to a shipwreck. The ten people set about helping each other produce things that were necessary for each others survival. Of the ten, John happened to be exceedingly industrious and managed to create more goods than the others on the island. John loved to trade the goods he created with the other people on the island, but John almost never gave any of this goods away for free. He always expected to be paid for his goods in either labor or in trade.
The others on the island began to resent the wealth that John had created for himself and decided that John should be forced to give them some of his wealth without them having to give John anything in return. They did not like the fact that John had such a comfortable life while the rest of them were barely scrapping by. In order to equalize the wealth in their community, the nine other people took a vote among themselves to institute a new government. The new government (which consists of the nine other people) instituted a tax that only effected John, which allowed them to take and redistribute property from John which they felt was excessive and then redistribute that wealth among themselves.
Do the nine other people besides John have a legitimate right to do this to John?
Does John have a right to defend his property from the other nine people?
Originally posted by snowspirit
Taxation isn't needed until there are services that are needed by most, and infrastructure. If you're going to need roads, sewers, street lights, garbage dumps, etc, you're going to have to get the money somewhere.
If most of the people have children, or might still have children, logistically it gets hard to apply a school tax to only those that have kids, may have kids, or will have grandchildren that might go to school from their house. Or a renter of their house has kids. To apply it only to people that actually have kids of school age, there would have to be an intrusive census every year, and people don't like those.
Do the nine other people besides John have a legitimate right to do this to John?
He works hard. He should be able to keep what he makes. There's only 9 others, if they want what he has, they should work harder and longer. If some of the people didn't have the skills to do stuff, then maybe if he was a nice guy, John could teach some of what he knows. Trade the teaching of the skills for dinners or back massages
Does John have a right to defend his property from the other nine people?
Yes, certainly, it's his stuff.
Taxes shouldn't be to move money around from the wealthy to the poorest, but in a civilized society it isn't nice to let people starve or be homeless either. If the person isn't working because they're lazy, then they shouldn't get anything. Eventually, they'll go to work if they want food or shelter.
If the person isn't working because they've been injured and/or are unable, they should be looked after. It's what civilized people do. Society. Crap happens, and sometimes people need help.
If someone has paid into a fund for unemployment insurance, or retirement, that fund is there for a reason. It shouldn't be called "entitlements" in a sarcastic way, the way the media is portraying it. People are forced to pay into these funds from their paycheques so they should be entitled to the money when it's needed and they shouldn't be made to feel guilty about it.
I've been trying to figure out the deal with the infrastructure problems in the US. I hear people saying they don't want their taxes paying for it, but how else does it get done? Isn't that one of the main reasons people pay taxes? To have roads, and schools, and sewers, water treatment, dams, parks, buses, trains, etc.?
Up here we've even managed to fit medical into our taxes, and from what I've been learning on here, we don't pay much more in taxes than Americans, plus our corporate rate is only 16.5%, which is apparently way lower than the US.
resent the wealth that John had created for himself
You don't need taxes to fund schools.
And if someone needs a handout because they are disabled, does that entitle them to use force against their neighbor in order to collect the "handout?"
Originally posted by snowspirit
You don't need taxes to fund schools.
OK, take the school out of the equation, the school could be user pay, but then if the population gets large, and many people cannot afford the user pay system,
Originally posted by mnemeth1
Originally posted by snowspirit
You don't need taxes to fund schools.
OK, take the school out of the equation, the school could be user pay, but then if the population gets large, and many people cannot afford the user pay system,
Why?
Why would things suddenly change with a large population?
Would things change because the government destroyed the economy and was preventing people from creating jobs?
You'll need to explain to me why things would suddenly change to where people could not get a job to pay for their kids education. People create jobs. Jobs are not something that the government provides. The only reason people can't create jobs is if the government is getting in their way.
As for the disabled people - they typically have families who can care for them. And for those very few disabled people who don't have families, there are a lot of very generous rich people who would take care of them through charity
Prior to the welfare State we have in America today, the church took care of almost everything. The church ran the soup kitchens, the homeless shelters, the charity hospitals, the schools, and a host of other services. All provided for free through charity.