| | Ryan:
WARNING: THREAD ABUSE IN PROGRESS
This tax discussion should probably be on a different thread, and I apologize for the thread abuse, but I've never been very anal about absolute thread purity. It's just not in me to worry about 'thread purity.' Thinking of more than one thing at a time is a pleasure, and it is not nearly necessary that everyone enjoy the same pleasures in life.
So, I'm going to permit myself this abuse, and still manage to sleep at night, because the topic was introduced in the context of paying for things related to the Fermi Paradox.
"(Ryan)Our taxes pay for a myriad of programs, and if the rhetoric is to believed, they go in equally. You pay for the a percentage of ALL federal programs with your taxes, even if the percentage that goes to each one is small."
That's an assertion, not a 'why?' To me, it's just as arbitrary to regard my pooled tax dollars as being theoretically uniformly distributed among all programs as opposed to directed at specific programs. That was the purpose of my meandering hypothetical, the 'Long Long Form 1040.' My argument, although it may not have been clear, is in the end of that hypothetical (where some of us do take the time to fill out the long long form 1040 and explicitly direct our tax dollars) we end up exactly where we are today, except that we've made the administration of common government more expensive, so why do it?
"(Ryan)Technically, you're not even paying for current programs, but the programs of yesteryear."
OK, then my also assertion remains; why can't I regard my taxes as applying to the programs of yesteryear that I agree with and want and benefited from?
"(Ryan)The argument that you might consider ALL of your taxes to be going to a program you value is an evasion of the fact that you have no choice in the matter."
I have no choice in the matter for as long as I am a dependent child. When I am an adult, if I continue to accede to the local political context that I draw benefit from, then I've made a choice as a capable adult in this world. It is not an excuse that "I can't afford to grow my own wheat and build my own bakery, therefore, I am entitled to free bread at the 7/11." It is also not an excuse that "I can't afford to buy myself a private island and defend it at www.privateislands.com, therefore, I am entitled to benefit from the freedom bread without paying for its expensive maintenance."
As adults, we have only so many ethical choices when we continue to benefit from an expensively maintained political context, even as we do not individually get to be emperors and have 100% of our wishes met, meaning, we agree with everything the local political context does.
On any given issue or set of issues that we disagree with, we either work politically to change them--and continue to pay our bill for benefits received(including, our ability to freely work to change them), or we accede to them, or we withdraw our consent and pay our own way in this world, as it is. The above are the 'ethical' choices, for as long as we as adults continually knowingly receive benefit from the expensively created and maintained and defended political context we find ourselves in.
If we believe we find ourselves in a totally tyrannical political context, then there is another ethical choice, and that is, to megapolitically overthrow it, and what determines the outcome is primarily winning the conflict. But our political ethical choices do not include, as adults, 'continue to accept benefit, but disavow the ethical obligation to pay for those benefits.' This is rationalized in most instances by disavowing that those benefits even exist.
The reality is, 'not paying my taxes' is not a choice in the current political context. Indeed, we have no choice. My argument is, we also have no ethical choice but to pay for the benefits we knowingly continue to accept, as adults. However, within that political context, there is still plenty of 'choice.' Including, how to arrange our affairs, how much taxes/subsidy we end up throwing at the state, and how we personally regard the taxes we do end up throwing at the state. I can pay them, shout out 'these are unfair' and be eaten alive with the injustice of 'where my tax dollars are going.' Or, I can pay them, and never give them a second thought, because I have minimized them to a level that I can justify. Or, I can go visit www.privateislands.com and do my adult calculus.
Or I can revolt in other than plain sight as in 'duck;' dodge the constructivist fork, let Obama and endless rounds of 'pump priming' do it, prove their case, or let them fail miserably and finally. What are we afraid of? That Obama et al are right about all this 'The Economy' running?
If we truly do not accede to our current political context, then we should be openly revolting. But within it, there are yet plenty of ethical choices. Other than in fantasies, it's currently the best shot we have on this earth. It permits, quite readily, the ability to 'hide in plain site,' to abstain, and my argument is, even when doing that, it can be ethically done.
regards, Fred
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