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by ALittleLight
1903 days ago
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I agree that taxation being theft depends on how you define theft (and how you define taxation) but that's true of any statement that says X is a type of Y. If the Mafia had a complex set of rules and procedures governing how they stole from you, I don't think you'd shy away from calling their activities theft. I feel the same way about the government. I don't like them. I didn't vote for them. I don't agree that they should take my money and I don't like what they spend it on. That they have laws I had no part in creating, am not aware of, and don't understand, on top of judges and lawyers I don't agree with doesn't alter the fundamental action taking place - people with guns forcing me to give them money by ultimately threats of violence. Calling taxation theft is not really a legal statement. It's a moral statement intended to make people think about taxation. Observing that the thieves don't consider it theft according to their laws is accurate, and that would be meaningful in some contexts, but that's not the moral statement being made. |
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I'm not American so I can be mistaken, but isn't it written in the American Constitution that government has the power to tax citizens?
In that case it's the price to pay to be part of the community, like it or not.
Coming from Italy I can only say that mafia doesn't do what they do because some fundamental law that defines a Country and is accepted by every political party gives them the power to do it, but only because they have the means to force other people to follow their own rules, they are violent criminals, out of the law.
Also: being prosecuted in a due process and eventually arrested it's not the same thing as being killed because some mob boss feels like it.