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by robocat
310 days ago
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> benefitted from Irish government services, schools, police, fire services, etc. You participated in the community (hopefully), used roads That is a terrible basis for argument: we mostly each get similar usage of services (roads, police, yadda yadda) which should be an argument for a fixed amount of tax per person (a poll tax). If you wish to argue that we get what we pay for: then rich people pay wayyyyyy more so they should get more government services??? The wealthy surely don't get better policing: instead the wealthy pay heaps for their own insurance and security systems. Be careful making any argument based on services received for money spent because the well off pay a lot and don't receive a lot for it. |
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Wealthy people and large companies do generally employ security, but that is merely supplemental. They enjoy the backdrop of a society where the vast majority of people at least recognize the basic concept of ownership, and where protection from external state actors is provided. More to the point, they live in a system where most people see negative expected return from just killing them and taking their stuff
Abstractions like insurance further require a system where agreements can be made and mostly enforced, and where the need for the insurance is low enough for the premium to be workable.
The small security team at any given company is there to handle the the exceptions that don't conform to the larger society's rules. It doesn't replace that protection entirely. You'd need a standing army for that, and you'd have to work full time just to maintain its loyalty.
Even with no direct services whatsoever, people benefit from society in more or less direct proportion to their wealth -- and arguably the benefit accrues exponentially as wealth increases, given that this enables the exponential growth of capital.