My response.
Let's start with the definition:
the act of stealing; the wrongful taking and carrying away of the personal goods or property of another; larceny.
In my mind, theft would be any situation in which someone takes something from me without me voluntarily giving it to them. In other words, if someone holds a gun to my face and says for me to give them my wallet, I will give them my wallet. But that is stealing, because the consequences of not doing so would have been a violent act against me.
Look at it from the government perspective. The government says "give me 30% of your money." I have a choice. Pay them, or go to prison. Even though I don't agree at all with what the money is being used for, and absolutely am not voluntarily giving them my money, I don't see how it is not considered "socially acceptable theft"
What say you?
You could leave the Country. That is another choice as opposed to going to jail.
That doesn't address my question... You could leave the country for any reason. I'm asking, is the concept of forceful taxation theft, and if not, why is it different?
Taxation is necessary with proper oversight and checks and balances. I just wish they'd go down instead of always going up.
It is not theft because you don't have to pay. You can choose to leave. So if you compare it to your scenario you have more choices. It is not close to the same thing.
And if the governmet shuts down my accounts and alerts border patrol, how could I leave?
I could also choose to run away from the guy with the gun, but that doesn't make what he did right.
Now you can keep making all sorts of strawmans, but that doesn't help the conversation. You don't think taxation is theft, tell me why
My response.
Let's start with the definition:
the act of stealing; the wrongful taking and carrying away of the personal goods or property of another; larceny.
In my mind, theft would be any situation in which someone takes something from me without me voluntarily giving it to them. In other words, if someone holds a gun to my face and says for me to give them my wallet, I will give them my wallet. But that is stealing, because the consequences of not doing so would have been a violent act against me.
Look at it from the government perspective. The government says "give me 30% of your money." I have a choice. Pay them, or go to prison. Even though I don't agree at all with what the money is being used for, and absolutely am not voluntarily giving them my money, I don't see how it is not considered "socially acceptable theft"
What say you?
I am not saying to skip out on your tax bill currently. You can choose to close up shop and leave in the future. By living within the United States of America you are agreeing to obey the tax laws that have been VOTED into our current laws. The fact that it has gone through the established process of government to be enacted makes it 100% LEGAL!
But just because something is legal doesn't make it ethical. For example, slavery was legal. The extermination of ***s was legal. And probably thousands of other examples I don't need to bother getting into. Cause you're smart enough to understand that legality does not equal ethical.
it is part of the social contract
this is where i don't agree with the libertarians
taxes suck and we could argue about what the certain amount should be to be taxed and what it should be used for
but taxes are needed and is part of a better society (or should help make a better society offering services etc)
You didn't ask if taxation was ethical.
it is part of the social contract
this is where i don't agree with the libertarians
taxes suck and we could argue about what the certain amount should be to be taxed and what it should be used for
but taxes are needed and is part of a better society (or should help make a better society offering services etc)
You're right, I asked if it was theft. Being legal doesn't make it not theft.
Actually, it does.