If it were clear that the government (and taxes) is evil, then most Americans would work to dismantle it.It's obviously not clear because we're having this conversation.I find it interesting that to you the fact that they are necessary is debatable, but the fact that they are evil is not.
3/10/2010 1:59:16 PM
What about "if they are in fact evil (which I think is clear)" makes it seem that I think it is not debatable?It comes down to natural rights. If you believe that humans are autonomous beings with certain natural rights, any government must necessarily infringe on those rights to exist (which would make it inherently immoral). If you do not believe that, then what rights would you claim humans do have?
3/10/2010 2:03:37 PM
3/10/2010 3:40:54 PM
a wise man will avoid philosophical discussions with those that ground their arguments on "natural rights". At least, that is, until that person can offer a compelling reason for how those natural rights are derived and why they must be respected.[Edited on March 10, 2010 at 3:44 PM. Reason : ``]
3/10/2010 3:44:14 PM
^^
3/10/2010 3:58:31 PM
hi"the government" enjoys the benefit of "authority"which in your freshman sociology class you will learnis defined as "legitimized power"where "power" specifically refers to doing harm to youeven to the point of killing you
3/10/2010 4:05:22 PM
i have no alternative system of rights because i do not believe they exist as objective guides to moral conduct. you say that rights "stem from the nature of man". okay, can we maybe narrow that down a bit? what is about humans that give them these special attributes called "rights"?[Edited on March 10, 2010 at 4:12 PM. Reason : ``]
3/10/2010 4:09:22 PM
i swear to god if you people turn this into a religion thread
3/10/2010 4:10:47 PM
If there are no rights, there is no morality and no such thing as injustice. In this case, why have any laws at all?[Edited on March 10, 2010 at 4:21 PM. Reason : ][Edited on March 10, 2010 at 4:26 PM. Reason : ]
3/10/2010 4:18:55 PM
non sequitur
3/10/2010 4:20:15 PM
No one likes paying taxes, but unless you are so pro-welfare that you expect free roads, free education, free food and drug safety, free national defense, free police protection, free fire protection, free Pell grants to help you attend a public university, and a nice layer of salt on the roads before a snow, then stop throwing around words like evil. You use these services all year long and then whine and complain when you have to pay for them just “because I happen to live here.”Maybe you can make a compelling case that you're paying too much in taxes, but when you act like it is some great injustice that taxes even exist then it just comes across as whining. You can go live in the woods somewhere if you want, but society is pay 2 play, always has been, always will be.
3/10/2010 4:25:44 PM
^^I'd say it is the fact that we have the ability to reason, and that the actions we decide to take have consequences that indicates that we must have rights. If we are held responsible for our actions (by society or by nature), then we should be allowed to decide on those actions independently.^ What does any of that have to do with taxation being immoral? I think we've already moved past the part of the discussion where you list all of the good things taxes provide and say why they're necessary.[Edited on March 10, 2010 at 4:35 PM. Reason : ^]
3/10/2010 4:26:41 PM
yikes. we make decisions that have consequences and therefore we have rights? i would love to see that chain of reasoning rolled out in detail.[Edited on March 10, 2010 at 4:41 PM. Reason : ``]
3/10/2010 4:40:32 PM
3/10/2010 4:41:48 PM
^^ If we must live out the consequences for the decisions we make, should we not be able to make those decisions on our own? If I decide to cut my leg off, I will have to deal with that decision the rest of my life. No one else should be able to make that decision for me, because I am the one who has to deal with the consequence. If we say that no one else can make that decision for me, that means I have a right to make that decision on my own.
3/10/2010 4:46:51 PM
To me, the issue of rights comes down to self-ownership. Do we have right the behave how we want, as long as it doesn't hurt someone else? Or do we only have the rights granted to us by elected officials?
3/10/2010 4:55:03 PM
3/10/2010 4:57:14 PM
3/10/2010 5:04:13 PM
It is simply the most reasonable approach. If the individual cannot make his own decisions regarding his own life, then who should? Natural rights is really just a rejection of rights. Saying that I have the right to decide whether to cut off my leg is really just saying that no one else has that right. By rejecting natural rights what you are claiming is that other people do have that right. So if you reject all rights, then how can you claim that they have that right? And from where does that right derive?
3/10/2010 5:08:21 PM
The plane can still take off.
3/10/2010 5:11:04 PM
good grief ghot, if you are going to blatantly crib Ayn Rand at least say so upfront.
3/10/2010 5:23:31 PM
3/10/2010 5:27:53 PM
^^ Sorry, but I've never read anything by Rand. I like the quote though.It is wrong simply because now I have no leg (which most people would consider a negative) and I must suffer that consequence. How can anyone claim that it is not wrong for me to unwillingly suffer the consequences of your actions? You seriously contend that there is nothing wrong with that? Most people understand innately that there is right and wrong. If you do not, I believe that is referred to as psychopathy.^ I'd agree with that. And I would claim that those actions are either moral or immoral. I'm not the one claiming there is no such thing as rights or morality.[Edited on March 10, 2010 at 5:34 PM. Reason : ^]
3/10/2010 5:31:57 PM
3/10/2010 5:34:33 PM
3/10/2010 5:52:54 PM
Well you have to start with some basis for morality, or what's the point in even setting up a government in the first place? There must be some consensus on right and wrong. The basis of our current government is natural rights, and fortunately, most people do agree with me when I say that no one else has the right to cut off my leg.So my argument still stands for anyone who subscribes to natural rights or anyone who believes that it is wrong to make people suffer the consequences of other peoples' actions. If you take the stance that there are no rights, and no objective morality, then there is no basis for any law at all. In that case, I can't see how it matters what society looks like.
3/10/2010 6:14:56 PM
Way to fight sophistry with sophistry you two![Edited on March 10, 2010 at 6:23 PM. Reason : ]
3/10/2010 6:22:32 PM
I wouldn't even approach it by way of rights, I'd merely bring up how their system really only explains the rights to the labor a man produces while being completely ignorant that labor is worthless without capital. I say, OK, you have the rights to anything you make, but what right do you have to steal capital that you had no hand in ever creating? Any product you can find of worth is in some way composed of capital that you had no part in. The fact is that you you resort to the same force to steal capital from others who have just as much right to it while at the same time complaining about how the government does the same thing to only a fraction of your labor.
3/10/2010 6:54:36 PM
3/10/2010 7:03:49 PM
^ I have thought of the repercussions. They are quite manageable. Widespread unemployment among the governing class. Human efforts diverted away from the political system and towards the economic system. A less corrupt Congress (both literal and appearance). A more satisfactory democratic process. It is the case that money has corrupted politics, the solution of which is to reduce the scope of politics in the economy. All in all, it seems to me that society would function better with a smaller government. And keep in mind, a smaller federal government does not produce any ungoverned spaces: we still have state governments with the constitutional right to regulate everything that moves, doesn't move, and other. What repercussion are you thinking of that I have not?[Edited on March 10, 2010 at 8:25 PM. Reason : .,.]
3/10/2010 8:23:53 PM
3/10/2010 8:30:16 PM
well the largest I could think of is the damage it would do to the worldwide economy as the go-to economy for stability and and the one responsible for a large amount of reserve currency suddenly undertook such a risky restructuring. Hell the whole world's economy was blasted into submission when only our housing market took a stumble.
3/10/2010 8:31:55 PM
3/10/2010 8:42:46 PM
3/10/2010 9:03:22 PM
3/10/2010 9:33:11 PM
3/10/2010 9:35:36 PM
Does anyone accept phasing out Medicare and Social Security as a possible plan? How about bring all troops home and auction off all of our bases? How about cut off all foreign aid? That's what needs to be done. Then, once we prove that we're serious about cutting spending, we can probably do a restructuring of the debt and only pay China back 80-90% of what we owe them. I'm sure they'd rather have that than for us to print the difference.Spending needs to be cut drastically. I don't see how anyone can deny that. It's not going to happen, though. The politicians will keep this gravy train going as long as it keeps them in office, which is why we're past the point of no return. Both parties will support said gravy train. No one wants to be the Grinch here, but if no one steps up to the plate, we're fucked.
3/10/2010 9:41:46 PM
3/10/2010 9:48:20 PM
3/10/2010 10:11:13 PM
If someone does not agree with a proposed tax, it can be passed against their will. They are still held to it by threat of force. This is coercion by definition. You can try to pass it off as legitimate using social contract theory, but that's a sham. Robert Paul Wolff did a good job of explaining how we are not really represented by our representative democracy in his In Defense of Anarchism. Taxation certainly is coercion and immoral. Attempts to claim otherwise come up short.
3/10/2010 10:22:18 PM
3/10/2010 10:24:31 PM
3/10/2010 10:27:55 PM
^ We're not talking about using coercion as defense. We're talking about initiating coercion, unprovoked. In your circumstances, you are talking about using coercion to defend your right to property. That's a completely different situation.^^ I have yet to see you suggest a better theory. What would you propose we use as a basis for morality? Subjective opinion? That's no real basis at all.[Edited on March 10, 2010 at 10:28 PM. Reason : ^][Edited on March 10, 2010 at 10:31 PM. Reason : ^^]
3/10/2010 10:28:07 PM
ok, let's say I refuse to pay any of my bills, how are they going to get their money?
3/10/2010 10:35:08 PM
How is who going to get their money? Assuming you have some kind of contract, the terms for breach of contract should be laid out before signing. If you agreed to pay and don't, they would be justified in using coercion to receive their payment.[Edited on March 10, 2010 at 10:39 PM. Reason : .]
3/10/2010 10:38:40 PM
Nice dodge, but they're going to get the government to take your money and give it to them, just like how the government will take it's tax money. Taxes are laid out in a contract as well, it's called being a US citizen.
3/10/2010 10:40:32 PM
And as I said, coercion in that instance would be justified. It doesn't matter if they do it themselves or they have some other party take action on their behalf, whether it be government or whoever.Taxes paid to the US Government were not a part of any contract I have ever signed or agreed to.
3/10/2010 10:43:36 PM
So is this where you say if you think a law is unjust then you aren't bound by it?I'm not sure how in any sufficiently large society there won't be some minority that feels coerced about something. Your flavor of feeling coerced is different from mine.
3/10/2010 10:50:02 PM
My point is that the ideal is that no one is coerced by anybody. Thus, the "completely voluntary society" thing I've been mentioning. I'm saying that should be what we work toward by reducing the amount of coercion wherever possible and refusing to add any more.
3/10/2010 10:54:08 PM
3/10/2010 11:13:54 PM