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Originally posted by Azazel
and why is that good?
Originally posted by Azazel
I never claimed otherwise.
Originally posted by Azazel
what's your definition of injustice? you say that something is wrong because it's injust. wtf is injust?I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Originally posted by MrBaggins
Coerce means "to compel to an act or choice"
not "to encourage an act or choice"
There is no compulsion... you've stated its a choice on the individuals part, since another course could be taken.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Originally posted by Deity Dude
Give me a break. Raising the price on a voluntary puchase is not stealing. Having your money taken from you without your consent is.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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You're asking me why justice is good? Is that really subjective. Maybe you are asking why that is better than the most good for the most people. Perhaps that is subjective.
Yes, I am asking you why there should be no meritocracy, which isn't egalitarian.
By claiming that an action which produces the most good for the most people you are allowing for an action that produces unfair treatment. Some people are made to pay a price for other peoples happiness.
Yes. And the price one of them pays is equally important to the utility another recieves. Thus, through calculation of positive and negative utilities, and the number of people experiencing each, we get the utility of the entire action. Unless you say that you can NEVER harm ANYONE's interests, in an ethical behavior.
Justice is when people are treated equally.
That's not true.
for example, in a court, is the just solution to have everyone punished equally, no matter the case, and whether the person is guilty?
If I'm forced to give my kidney to you that is an injustice, because I've been treated unfairly. I've paid the price for your happiness and I haven't recieved just compensation (not that I believe there is just compensation for it).
No, this is injustice, because it's not ethical.
Ethical and just are the same thing. Just doesn't mean always equal.
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How long will it take before some Apolytoners finally accept the fact that every rule, good or bad, is discriminatory.
Even natural rights attributions are discriminatory as they discriminate bearers (like people) from non-bearers (like rocks).
The problem is over whether it is wrongful discrimination or not.
If any male on Poly really believes that it's unjust to treat anyone differently in any way because of their race or sex, would they please report to their doctor for a breast examination or waste time being tested for sickle cell aenemia or Tay Sachs disease.Only feebs vote.
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taxes are just the price for living in America and in this society... don't like it? leave...
hey sava, if you dont like pork barreling in congress, just leave."Everything for the State, nothing against the State, nothing outside the State" - Benito Mussolini
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Originally posted by Lawrence of Arabia
what sort of ****ed up thinking is this? if you dont like something leave? snce when is america not open to everyone?
hey sava, if you dont like pork barreling in congress, just leave.
"The taxation system is the worst insult ever... I hate it, but there's nothing I can do about it."
because there IS something you can do about it... leave...
America is open to everyone, but its "The Land of the Free", not "The Free Land".
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Originally posted by MrBaggins
The basis of some of the mentioned judgements that were adjudicated against were some of the same arguments that you've used...
That income you earn is your property, and hence the government taking it is theft.
These judges have unanimously said no... income is taxable, period. There is no precident for any judge, however liberal, ever adjudicating contrary to that.
If you want to state your opinion that you consider it personally immoral... then I guess thats up to you... but its not a socially or legally acceptable argument.
If I were a slave in the south pre-civil war and went to court I would lose. Even if the case I made was morally correct, I would still lose. Now, if after I made the case the judge told me why I lost, and you quoted his words, that wouldn't change the fact that slavery is wrong. He might say things like 'we don't define involuntary servitude to your class of people as a crime so your case has no merit" he might say "we hear this kind of argument from people like you because it's in your own self-interest" You might even post his words and knowingly giggle afterwards. None of that would change the fact that slavery is wrong.
Stealing is wrong. If you are admitting that it is stealing but think the government has some special allowance to break a commonly accepted moral code (not to steal) then I would make the arguement that it is no different then the slavery example above.(i.e. legal immorality is still wrong) and like slavery - the government and the people were looking something obviously morally wrong straight in the eye and didn't either realize it or chose to ignore it.
If you are trying to say it isnt stealing, I make the following argument
Taking one's property/rightful possessions without thier approval is stealing. A rose by another name is still a rose. You can call it a "social contract" even though it doesn't meet the elements of a contract, you can call it voluntary even though my choices are "do it or else", but it doesn't change what it is. It is stealing.
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Originally posted by Deity Dude
No you are wrong.
Let's say a box of nails costs $2.00 and the box costs $0.12 and shipping is $0.40 and tax is $0.40 making the cost $2.92 and the store marks it up $0.50 for a price of $3.42 to the consumer. If the consumer buys it, saying he was coerced to pay the tax is like saying he was coerced to pay for the shipping. He wasn't coerced into paying for anything. He chose freely to pay $3.42 for the nails. The price of which was mad eup of multiple components. No one has forced him to buy anything them.
Now the seller has exchanged his nails for $3.42, which despite what some people say here, is now his $3.42. That $3.42 may be a promissary note from the government (currency), in older times it may have been pieces of gold, perhaps they strike a deal and the purchaser agrees to sweep the back room for the nails, either way, what he recieves is his. Now if somebody comes along and takes some of that money against his will, whether it be a thief, a charity that uses the money for a good purpose, or the government, they are still taking it from him against his will. Taking someone's property/rightful possession against thier will is stealing.
send you a bill for the 40 cents? Maybe you just mail in a cheque? No, the government forces the seller to hand over the 40 cents, or the seller before that who sold the last retailer the box of nails in the first place. The government could care less whether the seller built that into the price or not, nor what the seller's profit margin is. It still wants the 40 cents, and isn't about to ask the vendor if they feel like having that item taxable in the first place.
Any way you slice it, the tax is equally coercive to income tax. The vendor, at whatever level, has to pony up the 40 cents to the government and has no choice as to what they will and will not charge tax on.
And let's not even get into the serious breakdowns in accounting....."The French caused the war [Persian Gulf war, 1991]" - Ned
"you people who bash Bush have no appreciation for one of the great presidents in our history." - Ned
"I wish I had gay sex in the boy scouts" - Dissident
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Originally posted by Kidicious
I no more consented to pay the higher price than you did to pay the income tax. I was taxed for my activity and so were you. You didn't have to earn money, and I didn't have to make the purchase. You earned money for the benefit of having the money, so you didn't choose to pay the tax. Likewise, I made the purchase for the benefit of the item, not to pay the tax. I never gave my consent to the tax.
If I own a good, I can sell it for whatever I want. Me selling it for a price higher then you want to pay might reduce your total net value (not your income), if you decide to buy it, but that is a choice for you to make. Do you want the good bad enough to pay the asking price. I am not forcing you to buy it, nor am I telling you you must take it and work for me for three months to pay for it.
That is different then someone taking something I already own away from me against my will.
What you are saying is that If I have sell somwthing at a price higher than you like that is the same as me stealing you car.
One is called the free market system. The other is called stealing.
Ridiculous.
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Originally posted by Deity Dude
Again I am not making a legal case. But certain things are wrong no matter what. They are not personal opinions. I have given numerous examples of immoral laws that are/were still enforcible at the time. Let's take one; slavery.
If I were a slave in the south pre-civil war and went to court I would lose. Even if the case I made was morally correct, I would still lose. Now, if after I made the case the judge told me why I lost, and you quoted his words, that wouldn't change the fact that slavery is wrong. He might say things like 'we don't define involuntary servitude to your class of people as a crime so your case has no merit" he might say "we hear this kind of argument from people like you because it's in your own self-interest" You might even post his words and knowingly giggle afterwards. None of that would change the fact that slavery is wrong.
Stealing is wrong. If you are admitting that it is stealing but think the government has some special allowance to break a commonly accepted moral code (not to steal) then I would make the arguement that it is no different then the slavery example above.(i.e. legal immorality is still wrong) and like slavery - the government and the people were looking something obviously morally wrong straight in the eye and didn't either realize it or chose to ignore it.
If you are trying to say it isnt stealing, I make the following argument
Taking one's property/rightful possessions without thier approval is stealing. A rose by another name is still a rose. You can call it a "social contract" even though it doesn't meet the elements of a contract, you can call it voluntary even though my choices are "do it or else", but it doesn't change what it is. It is stealing.
You keep on saying that taking property is wrong... that very well may be... but its not your property to begin with.
You may own some Federal Reserve notes, but the value that they have, and their taxable state is determined by congress, as per the Coinage Act.
The Government can't steal what was theirs in the first place.
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Originally posted by Kontiki
Do you have the slightest idea how sales taxes work? Are you at all aware that you didn't even put forth a scenario where sales taxes exists, or at the very least, you've just pushed the trasaction to a different stage?
I own my own business in Michigan. We have a 6% sales tax in Michigan. You want a real example:
My cost of product 260.00
Shipping 10.60
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My Cost 270.60
My price for product 400.00
Sales Tax 24.00
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Amount consumer
must pay 424.00
Customer: "How much will that cost?"
Me: "424.00 including tax"
OUTCOME A:
Customer: "Nah $424.00 is too expensive I think I'll pass"
OUTCOME B:
Customer: "Thanks, I'll buy it"
Whether A or B the consumer decides what to do with his property. No one has forced him to pay for anything he doesn't want to. Tax, like profit and shipping and cost of goods is just another element making up the price.
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