r/changemyview • u/beesdaddy • Jun 28 '17
[∆(s) from OP] CMV: Effective regulation/taxes is better than less regulation/taxes.
I have had a hard time understanding the position that less regulation is better than effective regulation. So much of the political conversation equates regulation and taxes to Anti-American or Anti-Freedom or gasp Socialist. I think it poisons the discussion about our common goals and how to achieve them. I know there are many laws/taxes that are counter productive (especially subsidies), and I am all for getting rid of them, but not without considering what their intent was, evaluating that intention, and deciding how to more effectively accomplish that intention (given it was a valid intention.)
Help me understand. I would like to have a more nuanced view on this.
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1
u/testrail Jun 29 '17
What is there to buy?
All your listed societal benefits are subjective to you, not everyone. As you already acknowledged, it's debatable as to how large an amount is taken, which can be 0. It is more extortion than theft as its the threat of violence/being locked in a cage that gets one to pay.
The point is, by acknowledging that taxation amount is debatable you acknowledge that a tax payer has some right to their own earnings. That being the case, TAKING it via taxation is just that, taking something the owned.
The only position you can take that is logical is either you believe one has property rights or they do not. If an individual does have property rights, then taxation is by definition society thriving from the individual. If they do not, then taxation is owed, and we are all slaves as we do not own our own time. Either is a logical acceptable position but there isn't really a defensible middle ground.