Taxation is theft.

Rents are a form of tax.

@HeavenlyPossum if taxation is theft, then no roads for anyone šŸ¤·ā€ā™‚ļø

@voron

I’m not sure why we’d need taxes to fund roads, since roads existed before taxes.

@HeavenlyPossum really? You would have to go all the way back before feudal times šŸ¤” no even further, so yeah there were tracks made by cart wheels that were called roads before taxes, those awesome Roman roads were even paid for by taxes

@voron

- Roads predate states. States are much older than either the Roman state or the medieval period. We don’t need taxes to have roads.

- States don’t tax to fund spending.

- Coercion is bad. If people have to be coerced into doing something, it’s probably not worth doing. If it is worth doing, then people will probably do it without being coerced.

- The usefulness of coercion to you is not a good justification for coercion.

@HeavenlyPossum yup dirt tracks predate states, not a fan of drive on dirt tracks

@voron

ā€œPeople living thousands of years ago didn’t have asphaltā€ is not a particularly good argument for the state.

@HeavenlyPossum well, pragmatism never works with idealists

@voron

The observation that people in nonstate societies without taxes still have roads is empirical, not idealist.

@HeavenlyPossum ok show me a place today without any taxation with roads that are functional for my Honda Fit

@voron

Not sure if your dork car can handle roads in places like Chiapas, but, again, your argument seems to boil down to ā€œmen with guns should extract resources at gunpoint to fund amenities for me and my dork carā€ which still isn’t compelling.

@HeavenlyPossum not compelling ā€œto youā€, changing societies requires something be compelling to a fairly large number of people

@voron

So to be clear, you’re acknowledging that you’re happy men with guns coercively extract resources and compel labor so you can comfortably drive your dork car around?

@HeavenlyPossum To be clear you are offering no viable solution other than going back to living in huts and living as hunter gathers.
Give me a viable alternative

@voron

Can you identify where I’ve said that?

@HeavenlyPossum can you identify where I have said the stuff about extracting money with guns?
šŸ‘†
That’s your interpretation so I gave you mine, fair is fair.
.
Like I said give me your viable alternative, you haven’t so I have to fill in the blanks šŸ¤·ā€ā™‚ļø

@voron

What do you think taxes are? How do you think the state compels people to pay taxes? Does the state threaten to, say, tickle you if you don’t pay your taxes? Or maybe something a little harsher?

My alternative is ā€œpeople freely and voluntarily engaging in cooperative effort,ā€ but a critical identification of taxes and rents as theft does not rely on presenting an alternative.

@HeavenlyPossum thats an ambiguous theory, you like empirical stuff right?
Give me a functional example

@voron

Chiapas, Zomia, Tristan da Cunha, any time you and your mates get together and buy each other a round.

@HeavenlyPossum are you talking modern current Chiapas
@voron ā€œChiapasā€ is a synecdoche for the parts of the state that were liberated by the Zapatistas
@HeavenlyPossum how were the Zapatistas funded? How are those ares funded? Is there a firewall between the funding the Zapatistas get/got is there a firewall between all external funding & resources?
@HeavenlyPossum I’ll look into it Btw

@voron

Oh whew I was really worried there for a sec

Municipalities of Chiapas - Wikipedia

@HeavenlyPossum I have a feeling you don’t have one, and that’s ok
@HeavenlyPossum that model works great…for hunter gatherers living in huts šŸ¤·ā€ā™‚ļø

@voron

Not sure why you’re so reluctant to answer the question, or why you think so little of people that you can’t imagine them engaging in voluntary cooperation.

@HeavenlyPossum imagination is great I can imagine it just fine and I like doing so I also like imagining dragons 😊

@voron

So to you, people engaged in voluntary cooperation is as fantastical as dragons?

@HeavenlyPossum @voron

After watching people for the last 20 years or so, and studying much more of history, I would say emphatically that voluntary empathy/co-operation is about as realistic as dragons for most people.

The vast majority of modern governments are deeply broken, to the point that I do not believe that they can be fixed. That doesn't mean that some sort of more equitable system won't need to be built.
My personal ideal is a democratic federation very similar to the Fediverse. Some baseline stuff (like infrastructure, education, and Healthcare) helps EVERYONE so everyone can help fund it. Otherwise the groups sort themselves out and leaving for another area should be easy and cheap.

Strong centralized power is ALWAYS bad but co-operation for the common good sometimes requires co-operation instead of requesting.