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Taxation is Theft
sourcery | 15 April 2002 | sourcery

Posted on 04/16/2002 2:29:49 AM PDT by sourcery

 Taxation Is Theft

What is the moral justification for taxation?  What gives the government the right to collect taxes by force, whether force of law or force of arms--which in the end amount to the same thing?

The coerced collection of taxes is allegedly justified by four arguments--all of which are demonstrably false:

1. The "majority rules" argument: The majority in a society has the right to impose its will on the minority, either absolutely, or within the limits prescribed by a Constitution.

The refutation: It's been said that a democracy is where two wolves and a sheep vote on what (or who) is for dinner. The moral to be understood from this is that a vote by the wolfish majority to have the sheepish minority for dinner does not justify violating the rights of the sheep to life, liberty and property. By the same reasoning,  just because a majority votes to put those who don't "voluntarily" pay taxes in jail does not make it morally right.

The "majority rules" argument is based on the false premise that what just one of your neighbors would not have the right to do--appropriate your property using unjustified coercive force--society as a whole (who are just the aggregation of all your neighbors) somehow magically is morally justified in doing. Were this so, what principle would limit it just to taxes, or to just those things allowed by a Constitution?  Where did society get the authority to use a Constitution to give its agent, the government, powers that none of the individuals in the society possess by themselves as single individuals?

If your neighbor does not have the right to force you to be his slave, could it be that two of your neighbors have this right? If not two, then what about 1000 of your neighbors? 10,000 neighbors? 100,000 neighbors? 250,000,000 neighbors? Everyone living on the same continent?  What gives a group (or a society, or its agent, a government) any right to act that any individual member of the group would not have? Rights are not additive: two people who form a group have no more rights than either one has separately. The rights of any group, even society as whole, are simply the union of the rights of all the individuals in the group. It therefore necessarily follows that a group cannot have any rights that any individual member of the group does not also have. So if your neighbor has no just right to simply take from you whatever he or she wants, then neither do any group of neighbors--not even the entire society.

The conclusion is inescapable: you don't owe taxes merely because one or more of your neighbors say you do. I don't have the right to take your property without your consent.  Therefore, no group of people has the right to take your property without your consent--no matter how many people are in the group, nor how many of them vote in favor.

2. The "debt for services rendered and benefits received" argument: Government provides benefits and services. The recipients of said benefits and services owe the government something of value in exchange.  Furthermore, society is entitled to a "payback from," or "return on its investment in," each member of the society, and a "return on its investment" in the infrastructure of the society, payable as "dividends" from the earnings of the individuals who live in and benefit from the society and its infrastructure.

The refutation: The argument is flawed in several ways. Firstly, it falsely assumes that a valid debt is created whenever someone receives either direct (or collateral) benefit(s) as a result of actions voluntarily performed by someone else--even when the person receiving the benefit(s) did not consent to the creation of a debt, and even when the person performing the action(s) was largely motivated to perform those actions in his own self interest and for his own benefit.  Secondly, it falsely assumes that every taxpayer was a willing participant in a commercial transaction, where he agreed to pay a freely-negotiated price for some service or benefit. Thirdly, it falsely assumes that the amount of tax a taxpayer is assessed is reasonably proportionate to the market value of the services or benefits he received. Finally, the argument falsely assumes that a debt can convey an equity interest in the life, property, or profits of the debtor, without the debtor having consented to the granting of any such equity interest.

It is admittedly possible to accrue a debt without having first consented thereto: such a debt automatically accrues when the debtor causes harm to the life, liberty or property of someone else without valid cause (the only valid cause that comes to mind would be acting in justified self defense).  But other than this one exception (infringing on someone else's rights without his or her consent), debts cannot be justly created without the consent of the debtor.

Therefore, you don't owe anyone anything for those things that someone else voluntarily chooses to do without your consent to pay for them.  Conversely, you have no right to coerce payment from others who have not consented to pay you for the value of the work you voluntarily choose to do that happens to benefit them. 

Even more ludicrous is the idea that you owe anyone anything in exchange for the collateral benefits you may receive as a consequence of actions performed by others.  If I choose to build a dam for the twin purposes of generating electricity and controlling floods, solely because the dam benefits me (I make money selling the electricity, and my home is made safer against the threat of flooding), then why should the fact that your home also is made safer against the threat of flooding entitle me to send you an invoice for any part of the cost of building the dam?  I would have built the dam whether or not you benefited from it, and whether or not you agreed to pay anything for the privilege of benefiting from the dam.

If you benefit from what someone else has voluntarily done, and have not agreed to provide compensation, then you have no more obligation to pay than does the receiver of any other gift.  As long as we do not violate the rights of others, each of us may do—or not do—as we please.   If we do not like the fact that what we voluntarily choose to do happens to also benefit others, our only morally-correct remedy is to refrain from doing such things. If you think otherwise, go sweep the street clean and then send an invoice to the city—or to your neighbors—for the hours worked.  Good luck.

Typically, the amount of tax assessed is not reasonably equivalent to the fair market value of the services provided. One important reason that this is true is because the amount of tax that is assessed is not negotiated between "buyer" and "seller" in a free market.  Both overcharging and underpaying for goods or services makes one party a thief and the other party the victim of a crime.

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The debt you owe to a lienholder does not entitle the lienholder to an equity interest in your life, in your property, and/or in the fruits of your labor.  If you think otherwise, try billing (or even suing) your employer for a percentage of profits in lieu of salary, without his prior agreement.  Good luck.

3. The "social contract" argument: A society has the right to dictate to all members of (or residents in) the society what each individual must contribute (or "give back") in exchange for being allowed to live in, and/or be a member of, and/or receive benefits and services from, the society.  By agreeing to live in a society, an individual is deemed to have "consented" to this "social contract."

The refutation: This argument is based on the false premise that "society" as a whole has a right to coerce consent to debts as a condition for being "allowed" to be a member of the overall society.  

A society is just a group of people who interact.  It has no more rights or powers than does any one of its members.  Therefore, unless some individual member of a society has the right to coerce other members of the society to agree to conditions in exchange for membership in the society, then it cannot be that the society as a whole has any such right.

It's true that an individual has the right to refuse to interact with any other individual. However, each adult only has the right to make such decisions for himself, not for other adults.  Therefore, even though 67% of the citizens of a particular community do not wish to interact with a particular person, the remaining 33% would still have the right to do so, if that is their wish.

No person, or group of persons, has the right to prevent any two adults from interacting, as long as both adults freely choose to do so. It therefore follows that the only way that an individual can morally be denied permission to be a member of society as a whole, is for all the other members of the society to unanimously (and permanently) refuse to interact with him or her. Therefore, society as a whole has no right to demand that individuals agree to conditions in exchange for being allowed to participate in the society--because society has no right to prevent free association (or interaction) among consenting adults. You have the right to interact socially, economically and politically with anyone who is also willing to interact with you, regardless of how many third parties may object.

In fact, the only way that someone could be expelled from society would be to violate the rights of the one expelled.  Society would have to kill the person, and/or steal his property, and/or forbid him the right to live on his property, and/or interdict his right to contract with others for a place to live and/or to produce income, and/or violate his right to travel.  No one has the right to deny anyone the right to live, to own property, to travel, to engage in commercial transactions with others who are willing, or to do anything whatsoever so long as no else&#8217;s rights are being violated. Therefore, society has no right to do any of these things, and so it therefore has no right to threaten to do them unless individuals agree to be taxed.  Such a proposition would be extortion&#8212;a fancy word for theft.

You have inalienable rights because you are a person, not because you agree to pay taxes.  To make the free exercise of your rights contingent on the payment of taxes converts inalienable human rights into privileges that must be purchased.  That way lies slavery.

Society is an epiphenomenon that emerges from the actions and interactions of the individuals of which it is composed.  Society is thus a creation and manifestation of its members, who are therefore its rightful masters.  To posit instead that society rightfully owns and controls the individuals who are its members wrongfully makes each individual a slave to the group.  Others do not own you just because you interact with them. Neither do you own others because they interact with you.  Therefore, society does not own you because you live in it.

It must also be noted that the so-called "social contract" is not properly a "contract" at all.  At no time are individuals ever told what are the conditions of the "social contract" to which they must agree.  At no time are individuals ever asked to formally agree to the terms of this alleged contract.  I have never agreed to any such contract, and I strongly doubt that anyone who ever reads this essay has ever done so, either.  The alleged "social contract" is therefore nothing more than a fictitious "blank check," drawn on the life, liberty and property of the enslaved population, that those in power can cash in any amount that suits them, at any time&#8212;again and again.

4. The "moral debt to those in need" argument: Those who have more than they need are morally obligated to provide for those who have less--and it is a necessary and proper function of government to make sure that the "haves" contribute their "fair share" to the "have nots."  Therefore, the needs of society for the services and benefits of government outweigh the property rights of individuals.

The refutation: This argument is based on the false premise that the needs of one person constitute a moral debt or lien on the life, property or liberty of someone else. This is a wide-spread, but very dangerous, fallacy. No such principle can be morally justified, because it inevitably leads to logical contradictions that destroy individual life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. It is maliciously inimical to the very foundations of freedom.

Obviously, if I give (almost) everything I have to charity (or to taxes), then I become the "needy" person, and can then "rightfully" (sic) demand "help" from others.  Just by having less, and doing less productive work, I can "create a moral obligation" (sic) for others to provide for my needs.  As a result, those of you willing to work become the slaves of those of us willing to leach off the efforts of others.  But the resulting "negative feedback loop" must eventually lead to social, moral and economic decay.

To make each individual responsible for meeting the needs of others would have the following consequences:

<![if !supportLists]>a)     <![endif]>The individual would become a slave to all those with greater need,

<![if !supportLists]>b)     <![endif]>The principle of "moral risk" would result in many people failing to act responsibly with respect to their own welfare and best interests, and

<![if !supportLists]>c)     <![endif]>The "haves" would use the fact that they are coerced into supporting the "have nots" to impose laws and regulations restricting everyone's freedom&#8212;on the grounds that social welfare paid for by coercive tax collection gives the taxpayers a legitimate stake in preventing citizens from making poor life choices.

Down this path lies tyranny.

Fundamentally, neither my needs, nor someone else's needs, justify coerced taking from others. Just because I need a heart transplant does not justify my taking your heart without permission. Just because my neighbor needs food to eat does not justify either of us taking from you the food you need to feed your family. Just because I and my family need a place a live does not justify my evicting you and your family from your apartment. Need is not a valid or workable basis by which to assign ownership of property. You are not a slave to my needs, nor am I a slave to yours.

The principle that your life, liberty and property belong only to you, and that you have no obligation to give them to others, and cannot rightfully be coerced into doing so, is the foundation of freedom.  Any society that violates this principle makes slaves out of its members.

You should not be responsible for the consequences of my actions and decisions, and I should not be responsible for the consequences of yours. Each person must be fully and solely responsible for the consequences of the way he/she lives his/her life.   

If you wish to feel guilty because you are able and willing to earn a living, that's your affair. If you wish to donate some or all of what you have to others, that's your affair. Nothing prevents you from giving as much as you like to the charities of your choice. But you have no right to select the charities that others must contribute to, nor to specify the amount or percentage of their charitable giving. If you did, then they would have the same right with respect to you, and you might not like their choices!

No one has the right to be "generous" (sic) with other people's money without their permission. That's not generosity--it's theft.

Working to support yourself and your family is not immoral. Expecting to receive the full benefit of the work you do is not immoral. Expecting others not to steal from you is not immoral. Your hard work helps both yourself, your family, your community, your country and the world at large.  You owe no one any debt merely for having worked to accumulate property, nor for having done productive work.

Conclusion

The fact that your neighbors have voted in a law that says you owe taxes does not mean that you do, because others have no right to take your property without your consent. 

The fact that you benefit from the operation of government does not mean you owe taxes, because no moral debt can be created without either your consent or your misbehavior. 

The fact that you are allowed to operate as a member of society does not mean that you can be construed to have agreed to pay taxes in exchange, because a) you have not in fact agreed to any such contract, b) you have the right to interact (and do business with) anyone else who is willing, and c) no one has the right to violate your rights, or make the enjoyment of your rights contingent on the payment of a fee.

The fact that there are those whose needs are greater or more dire than yours does not mean you owe any taxes, because you are no one&#8217;s slave, no matter how needy they may be.


TOPICS: Philosophy; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: morality; taxation
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Comment #41 Removed by Moderator

To: Poohbah
Eventually, the poor will simply shoot the officers of your perfect government, and impose a Jacobin terror that will take decades to get over. The only way to avoid this outcome is to exterminate the poor first.

Revolt or genocide. Your choice.

You are terrorizing yourself with unjustified paranoia. It seems to me that a government that is doing all the same things Jefferson so eloquently criticized in the Declaration of Independence--only to a far greater extent--is the one that should worry about revolution (not recommended, by the way--but it could happen).

It is logically impossible to revolt against a government that doesn't exist. And in the case of a minarchy, revolt would be logically possible, but there would be little motivation. The more powerful the government, the greater the potential rewards for taking it over. And the less poweverful the government, the less there is to be gained by its overthrow.

But you object that a minarchy would be overthrown and replaced with a severe Tyranny. And that is certainly possible. But it is only likely in the case where there is a social consensus for tyrannical government, such as we have in this country today. A society gets the form of government it thinks is right. No minarchy will be established here, or anywhere, as long as the social consensus does not favor it. But the same constraint would protect minarchical government in a society that was committed to minarchy.

Consider:


42 posted on 04/16/2002 6:43:20 PM PDT by sourcery
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To: big'ol_freeper
A little bump your way.
43 posted on 04/16/2002 6:44:25 PM PDT by Lil'freeper
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To: sourcery
They don't care about your feelings or thought on the issue. The Treasury wants the $3.32 you owe in tax for your yearly earnings NOW!
44 posted on 04/16/2002 6:45:25 PM PDT by A CA Guy
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To: sourcery
All told, state & fed (fica, ss, & med) took about 20 grand from me this year. I feel robbed. The unaccountability of lost federal cash really bothers me. Liberal claptrap getting some of my cash drives me up the wall, but my fair share goes to fund those clowns, too.

NRST is the only fair tax. But idiots can still misspend even that.

45 posted on 04/16/2002 6:53:09 PM PDT by xzins
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To: Titus Fikus
Yes, but when we had such a system, aka the tariffs, it was full of the exact holes you describe. No sense reinventing the wheel.

The tarrifs were also theft. And they worked fine for raising revenue. The problem with them was solely political. Of course tarriffs wouldn't work now, because the government now--unlike 90 years ago--spends so much money on things that it has no Constitutional authority to buy.

Remember, the issue isn't how can the government eliminate taxes and still spend as much money as it currently does. The issue is how the necessary functions of government can be funded: police and military, courts, legislative operations, executive branch operations. It does not take anywhere close to 10 trillion dollars/year to do those things for the entire North American continent. We're paying Lambourghini prices for Yugo-level service. And the fact that taxes are coercively collected by theft is the major reason why.

46 posted on 04/16/2002 6:55:15 PM PDT by sourcery
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To: A CA Guy
They don't care about your feelings or thought on the issue. The Treasury wants the $3.32 you owe in tax for your yearly earnings NOW!

Gee, if that's all they want, maybe I should just pay it and get it over with. But, if it turns out that they actually want substantially more than that, will you agree to pay the difference? :-)

47 posted on 04/16/2002 6:57:55 PM PDT by sourcery
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To: sourcery
I pay quarterly. NO THANKS!
48 posted on 04/16/2002 6:59:56 PM PDT by A CA Guy
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To: sourcery
Taxation Is Theft

If you really think that, get used to feeling ripped off for the rest of your life unless you are in prison.

49 posted on 04/16/2002 7:01:31 PM PDT by biblewonk
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To: xzins
NRST is the only fair tax.

Well, I'll admit that it's a substantial improvement over the present system. But it's still not moral. Nevertheless, since it is substantantially better than the status quo, I'm all in favor (I am not unrealistic, I know that taxes aren't going away anytime soon, and that the only hope of getting rid of them is incrementally).

But idiots can still misspend even that.

Yes. And why not? It's not like the government actually earned any of that money itself. There's just not much motivation to be frugal or effective with other people's money--especially when you'll be getting more next year, and can always increase the take whenever the urge strikes you.

50 posted on 04/16/2002 7:04:33 PM PDT by sourcery
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To: biblewonk
If you really think that, get used to feeling ripped off for the rest of your life unless you are in prison.

I'm under no illusions. But great changes can come to pass, given sufficient time and preparation. If not in my lifetime, then eventually. A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step.

51 posted on 04/16/2002 7:07:24 PM PDT by sourcery
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To: Torie


Members of the Commonwealth try out the
"Banned in Boston" brand of baked beans in the town square

52 posted on 04/16/2002 7:14:05 PM PDT by Cultural Jihad
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To: southern rock
Torie's a NJ self-described "moderate," here on FR, i.e., a wholly worthless participant to a discussion involving the limiting of government: a Big Government apologist who's known for grabbing the cheeks of Big Government and who sucks as hard as he can. I think you get the picture.
53 posted on 04/16/2002 7:17:17 PM PDT by Agamemnon
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To: Agamemnon
Torie is a self described moderate (moderate conservative actually) and therefore worthless participant from Orange County, California, not NJ. I thought I would just correct the record.
54 posted on 04/16/2002 7:19:36 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Agamemnon
Oh yes. Torie probably pays more in taxes than you make. That is just a guess.
55 posted on 04/16/2002 7:20:24 PM PDT by Torie
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To: sourcery
Anyone who pays $50,000 a year in taxes, makes a heck of a lot more than I do, can buy just about anything they want (unless they are living beyond their means).

What is it paying taxes is keeping you from getting?

56 posted on 04/16/2002 7:24:03 PM PDT by philetus
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To: sourcery
Bump for later
57 posted on 04/16/2002 7:25:05 PM PDT by ThJ1800
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Comment #58 Removed by Moderator

To: Cultural Jihad
Hi there, CJ! Long time no see.

Anyway, I am quite willing to pay for the goods and services that I agree to buy--including police services, legal services and road services. But I do insist on getting to decide how much of each service I want to buy, and who I want to buy it from (based partially on the asking price, among other considerations). What's immoral about that?

Would it be fair to call you a "cheat," because you refuse to buy from sourcery's political commentary magazine, at a price set by me over which you have no say?

59 posted on 04/16/2002 7:29:32 PM PDT by sourcery
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To: sourcery
Arguments1,2,3 do not address the situation I laid out of the bequest of a trust, from one generation to it's Posterity.

1. "majority rule" stated in the sense of "democracy" is not the issue in such a trust.

The bequest of the Constitution was not by majority rule, it was by supermajority and created a rule of law laid down by the sovereign authority of the People to create a trust in perpetuity for the benefit of their Posterity.

An individual may decline such a bequest by renouncing his status and removing himself from access to its benefits. He may not however just quit participating in its requirements (specifically taxation) without such a renunciation.

2. Debt for service rendered benefits received.

Does not apply to the case of the bequest, the reqirements of the trust may be abrogated by simply renouncing participation and removing onesself from access to the trust's benefits and its protections of the law it establishes.

The only debt that might be said to accrue is that of not meeting the obligations of support under the trust while still a citizen, a matter of law, not of contracted service.

3. The social contract argument:

Doesn't apply either, the status of citizen is may be unilaterally renounced by individual action and departing. No social contract forcing obligating one to stay and perform, no consideration has been tendered to obligate you in the sense of a contract at all. It didn't even require your consent to become a citizen. The assumption arises from an accident of birth, or naturalization. Either status may be renounced unilaterally, and the individual may depart.

4. Moral debt argument to those in need.

You may renounce your citizenship at any time, doing so ande departing from the protections and jurisdiction of the trust, removes you from any future call on your resources.

60 posted on 04/16/2002 7:58:04 PM PDT by ancient_geezer
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