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| | #181 (permalink) (top) |
| Redskins Rule Location: South-Western Virginia Posts: 2,295 | Yes they do. My contention was that government does not get the monetary benefit of the KNOWN benefits of an educated public. You bitch and moan about the costs, ignoring the fact that there are definite rewards. It's just that Exxon/Mobil and Microsoft and every other private industry you can name gets to reap those rewards and you guys still complain that your taxes go to pay to educate the public. Government takes on the burden because private industry has proven to be too short sighted to support those kind of long term goals. Try supporting your contention that private industry does it better. Where more people going to college before or after public education became the norm? Were literacy rates higher before or after public education became the norm? Do the most well off and productive nations have a system of private or public education? All I see when I look down, something jumpin' on the ground, Scratchin' dirt, cluckin' in the barnyard - Tell me, could that be you? John Kay |
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| | #182 (permalink) (top) |
| Redskins Rule Location: South-Western Virginia Posts: 2,295 | This is a vast oversimplification and if you do not know it, you should. I do not have to be coerced to pay my taxes. I pay them because I know that it is necessary. Government does not coerce me much at all. It coerces me into not smoking pot anymore and it coerces me into not being able to marry who I want, but otherwise I am pretty free of coercion. It delivers paved roads and an education and an army to protect me and protection against ecoli laced hamburger meat and helps to secure my right to say what I want about politics and read whatever books I choose to read, it keeps fire trucks at the ready in case my house catches on fire and policemen on the streets to catch those who need to be coerced into not stealing my VCR and car, and it helps pay for research into illnesses that might affect me or a member of my family. It does thousands of other things for me that I have not even mentioned and in the ballance, I am pretty satisfied. In the ballance, most people would rather have the government we have than no government because most people never need to be coerced by our government in any but small ways. Most people are happy, in ballance with the level of coercion they need to endure to get THE REWARDS OF GOVERNMENT THAT ARE IT'S ACTUAL PURPOSE, because coercion is a tool government uses to accomplish it's purpose, not it's reason for existing, as you claim. All I see when I look down, something jumpin' on the ground, Scratchin' dirt, cluckin' in the barnyard - Tell me, could that be you? John Kay |
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| | #183 (permalink) (top) | |
| dimpled chad Location: Michigan Posts: 6,881 | Quote:
Really, the perceived need to pay taxes, or any other kind of fee, is inherently coercive. Where these artificially imposed "needs" are in effect, we are ultimately placed under some degree of duress. And, as has been argued all over the political spectrum, the "national unity" behind paying taxes is a false one. Yes, it's true there are no individuals who pay ALL taxes, but the mere process of being forced to pay for this and that is not truly unifying, it's a way of artificially dividing people. So not only is taxation imposed, but it's ultimately divisive -- as is the bulk of the state-capitalist system. Also, trade and social activity cannot help but take on a false character, as we believe we cannot do anything unless there is a price tag involved. And what establishes and defends these price tags? It would be the authorities an dtheir biggest loyalists, who tend to be either wealthy and powerful or highly indoctrinated. Grandpa h. "For men become civilized, not in proportion to their willingness to believe, but in proportion to their readiness to doubt." - H. L. Mencken | |
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| | #184 (permalink) (top) | |
| Redskins Rule Location: South-Western Virginia Posts: 2,295 | Quote:
All I see when I look down, something jumpin' on the ground, Scratchin' dirt, cluckin' in the barnyard - Tell me, could that be you? John Kay | |
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| | #185 (permalink) (top) | |
| dimpled chad Location: Michigan Posts: 6,881 | Quote:
You even suggest we could not have access to water without the coercive state, even though the state and capitalist industry is going out of their way to monopolize and, apparently, pollute such resources. Taken collectively, or even individually, they are no savior. However, if you veer away from the state-capitalist system, you'll most surely experience systematic coercion and alienation. You'll have a much more difficult time accessing resources and you'll likely either face much adversity or total obscurity. And that's supposedly good? This is why I have to wonder what kind of lives some of you Volconvo-ites have, where the system is somehow so benign, even beyond general criticism. Do you never step outside? When I do, I see my points validated over and over again. I view news sources -- even mainstream, democratic-Republican leaning ones -- and what I say is quite true. Sycophants don't paint it in these terms, but the state steals land and resources from the general population, and divvies them out to those obedient enough, and, significantly, to the wealthy. This is aided in large part by banks, which are essentially legal institutions, and other capitalist structures (such as insurance and mortgage companies). The pandering to ruling elites is the cause of our greatest problems. It's jarring to want to play the melody but leave the chords to them. Grandpa h. "For men become civilized, not in proportion to their willingness to believe, but in proportion to their readiness to doubt." - H. L. Mencken | |
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| | #186 (permalink) (top) | |
| Redskins Rule Location: South-Western Virginia Posts: 2,295 | Quote:
All I see when I look down, something jumpin' on the ground, Scratchin' dirt, cluckin' in the barnyard - Tell me, could that be you? John Kay | |
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| | #187 (permalink) (top) |
| Redskins Rule Location: South-Western Virginia Posts: 2,295 | And since we are no longer even close to the OP, I think this thread is played out. I'm sure, Grandpa, that you and I will cross paths on this matter in other threads. All I see when I look down, something jumpin' on the ground, Scratchin' dirt, cluckin' in the barnyard - Tell me, could that be you? John Kay |
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| | #188 (permalink) (top) | |
| dimpled chad Location: Michigan Posts: 6,881 | Quote:
It's also a matter of misperception. If we work for an organization -- whether public or private -- and say, "this is not you or I, but the nation or the company," we're only deluding ourselves. But this happens everyday, and must happen if we are to have the state, capitalism, or any other mental subversion of the self and human community. Grandpa h. "For men become civilized, not in proportion to their willingness to believe, but in proportion to their readiness to doubt." - H. L. Mencken | |
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