Even if you live deep in the woods with a bunch of chickens and vegetables, without using any state resources, you must make a certain amount of money per year to pay property taxes. All of your possessions are essentially on loan to you by the state. You cannot live a dollar-free, self-sufficient lifestyle in the US. Should people not have the right to that option? Is there any that I'm not aware of?
8/20/2013 5:22:39 PM
8/20/2013 5:27:28 PM
^That's illegal too.http://www.nationalhomeless.org/publications/crimreport/introduction.html[Edited on August 20, 2013 at 5:30 PM. Reason : .]
8/20/2013 5:28:43 PM
You don't even have the right to not-insure yourself anymore.
8/20/2013 5:30:15 PM
sometimes I kinda wish we would just wall-off one of our useless states like Utah or something and just give people the option to enter it so that they could live out the rest of their lives completely free of the state and outside influence only to discover just how goddamn hellish that would be.at the very least, it would mitigate the libertarian circle-jerk that is had on message boards all over the country.
8/20/2013 6:40:34 PM
^It would be a hellish existence for most people, including most internet libertarians. There are tons of people, though, who are completely capable of living this lifestyle comfortably. I don't understand why you would be against it just because it's not your thing. Why shouldn't people have this option?Also Utah is a beautiful state
8/20/2013 6:47:37 PM
I'm not against it. I'm for it. And if it has the added benefit of shedding the country of Utah, then I'm all for it.Have fun chopping down trees for your log cabin, cultivating rain water, growing your own garden, and protecting your few possessions from those who don't acknowledge the conceit of property......oh, and bears.
8/20/2013 6:50:31 PM
8/20/2013 6:56:54 PM
Buddhist monks don't live in the wild, and neither do hippie communists. And even the amish understand the importance of community. None of those examples of people living an independent and self sustaining lifestyle.Look, go ahead and try it. There's a reason why life expectancy is higher now than it was when nomadic tribes were wandering the earth, or when early pioneers were getting bit by rattlesnakes and dying of dysentery. Better hope the rain gods are merciful and bless your crops, otherwise your freedom loving ass is starving this winter.How's that liberty going to feel when you're in Utah on your own being pummeled by a bear? Just look at what happened to this guy:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OdSYygIsr0
8/20/2013 7:38:28 PM
8/20/2013 7:43:01 PM
Aren't there some areas of Texas and Alaska without property taxes?Also are you saying you don't use any state resources?]
8/20/2013 7:43:42 PM
^^^I never mentioned living "in the wild" in my first post. I'm talking about living off the grid and outside of the dollar system. Why the hostility?
8/20/2013 7:46:06 PM
I'm just being a dick. Pay it no mind.But seriously, you use more state resources than you think. And the only reason why I used my Utah analogy was to post that youtube clip. Well, that and to make the obvious point that any "society" (if you could even call it that) that was entirely independent of any form of governance would in all likelihood devolve into savagery. Seriously. Underground economies and warlord type stuff. That, and just a general shitty standard of living. You would need to go into "town" within a week just to resupply on doodoo paper, at which point you'd be using state resources.I'm not saying it can't be done, but the closest thing we have to a "stateless" society are Amazon tribes and war torn cities like Mogadishu. If that's your bag, then have at it.
8/20/2013 7:53:11 PM
One way to escape taxes, until you request the government save you:http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/aug/15/christians-pacific-voyage-rescue-kiribati
8/20/2013 8:08:37 PM
8/20/2013 8:20:07 PM
8/20/2013 8:41:22 PM
^Where does car insurance stand in that scenario?
8/20/2013 8:55:25 PM
^Cars are optional.
8/20/2013 8:57:52 PM
8/20/2013 9:04:04 PM
Someone's always gonna be in charge, whether you like it or not.
8/20/2013 9:08:58 PM
8/20/2013 9:11:39 PM
It's an assumption based on the entirety of recorded history everywhere on planet earth.
8/20/2013 9:13:19 PM
Okay. Slavery still exists today. As in, actual human ownership, I'm not even speaking in abstract terms here.Do you think that's acceptable? Is it okay to say "Eh, that's always how it will be"? If something is wrong, then should we not oppose it?Philosophically, what is "realistic in our lifetimes" or "practical" is not important. If people assign necessity to evil, then we will continue to have evil. It's important for those capable of understanding and processing the moral landscape insist on better circumstances. The best (most permanent) revolutions are intellectual in nature.[Edited on August 20, 2013 at 9:21 PM. Reason : ]
8/20/2013 9:20:32 PM
8/20/2013 9:52:53 PM
Yes. A nation full of gun owners and fundamental Christians would spontaneously form a highly civilized technological Hong Kong like utopia within a decade or so.Your thought exercise isn't even hypothetical. At least hypotheticals are built on careful observations of real world behavior.
8/20/2013 9:53:29 PM
8/20/2013 9:53:56 PM
The entire second half of American history of westward expansion is a case study of people escaping statehood and failing miserably. So unless you want to go join the Donnor party, come join us back in reality and try to limit the abuses of government rather than trying to escape it.
8/20/2013 10:01:59 PM
Your property is being protected from invasion-- you owe the militaryYour property is being protected by the rule of law-- you owe your state and federal attorneys general.There's no escaping coercion in this world. Homesteaders are free of it only because of the governments existing over their head.
8/20/2013 10:10:11 PM
8/20/2013 10:29:24 PM
8/20/2013 10:47:16 PM
8/20/2013 10:52:25 PM
property is theft, yo
8/20/2013 11:26:33 PM
8/21/2013 3:35:52 AM
8/21/2013 5:47:40 AM
if a totally voluntary society is possible (by that I mean no "violence" from the government), then why hasn't it happened? if its possible to do, then why haven't libertarians started this? what is stopping them?
8/21/2013 7:44:20 AM
So the only defense to what this thread is actually about (property tax), is that people utilize some level of government resources, regardless of what they do or where they live (defense of their property, at a minimum). As such, they are required to earn a minute level income to pay into the system. I see the argument, but it still seems wrong to me.
8/21/2013 8:09:42 AM
many places have exemptions from property taxes for the things you described. here in NC, i know that we have exemption programs for elderly, disabled, and disabled veterans. There is also a deferment program that's open to most people. I know in other places there are exemptions for homesteaders (unsure about here in NC).
8/21/2013 9:39:14 AM
8/21/2013 10:06:57 AM
^not sure how old you are or what your life experience is, but your utopian visions don't really seem to account for human nature and reality.
8/21/2013 10:09:15 AM
in your example the person is just using the land and no one owns it
8/21/2013 10:09:22 AM
8/21/2013 10:35:05 AM
^You could take that argument in two directions. If you tilled the land, you created something that wasn't there before.Or similarly, if you built a house, you're only using materials that already existed.[Edited on August 21, 2013 at 10:44 AM. Reason : v gotcha]
8/21/2013 10:38:39 AM
Right, but theft presumes prior ownership. Picking up a stick isn't stealing.
8/21/2013 10:43:30 AM
But is cutting down a bunch of trees and routing a stream for irrigation?
8/21/2013 10:49:23 AM
so you have your land that you chose and built your house on. I decided that I want access to the minerals under your crops, so I've built a house on that land too and am starting to mine it. i hope you don't mind that my window is 6' from you. we're all good right?
8/21/2013 11:01:09 AM
8/21/2013 11:19:31 AM
My mine is doing really well and I need to expand it. Your house and crops are in my way so I've torn them down.We're still good, right?
8/21/2013 11:28:08 AM
8/21/2013 2:06:30 PM
who enforces and protects that social contract? you? my mining company is bigger than you, and in this libertarian free-for-all we have our own private police and military to protect transactions. we are taking your shitty farm.
8/21/2013 2:15:56 PM
8/21/2013 2:42:44 PM