
The Twenty-First-Century Abolitionist Project: Slavery and Taxation
Submitted by xntryk1 on Sat, 03/28/2009 - 15:19
March 28, 2009
The Twenty-First-Century Abolitionist Project: Slavery and Taxation
by William Buppert, thirdgun@hotmail.com
That no government, so called, can reasonably be trusted, or reasonably be supposed to have honest purposes in view, any longer than it depends wholly upon voluntary support. ~ Lysander Spooner
This essay is an incendiary device. My muse is Wilberforce and the subject is the abolition of the last existing institution of slavery in America – taxation. Like Wilberforce, we may be generations from satisfaction of the dream of the end of the coercive state but if the seed is not planted, the goal will never be realized.
I despise the income tax. I loathe the property, excise, gasoline, sin, estate, capital gains and every other tax. I think the colonists got it backwards, I want representation without taxation. These are often derided as utopian but I would suggest they are dystopian notions. I see no possibility of perfection in this mortal coil, but risk and possible failure are the engines of progress and capitalism invigorates the most powerful economic engine of all – self-interest to serve others. Mises claims "[t]he member of a contractual society is free because he serves others only in serving himself. What restrains him is only the inevitable natural phenomenon of scarcity."
I think it is loathsome for one man to own another and the involuntary tribute demanded by government is simply another form of owning another man’s wealth and labor. Taxation is the way collectivists practice their compassion by taking their neighbor’s money at gunpoint. It also violates the zero-aggression principle shared by many libertarians.
Continue at: http://www.lewrockwell.com/buppert/buppert19.html















nice post...but what about wages?
I wanted to share something with the rest of you guys....I have a friend who is an Anarchist and he keeps bringing up the issue of wage slavery. I dismissed it outright for awhile but I'm having a hard time refuting it and I'm starting to question the moral issue of people being forced to rent themselves out to bosses(masters as he would call them) and receive permission to use their property only to further enrich their bosses. Do any of you view profits as a tax? He does...Just throwing it out their..Starting to read the works of old school anarchists and wanted to get your thoughts on it.
Wage-Slavery and Monopolies
.....cannot exist in the medium to long-run in a free-market-society.
I've answered this elsewhere.
Look at my post: "Anarchist will always fear 'Wage Slavery' in a Free-Market"
Octobox
Mises on Profit/Loss
Thanks, Xntryk1
If you want representation WITHOUT taxation. You just abolished the blubberment! :) :) :) Lol.
Heck, I don't even want representation, period...
I represent myself, thank you very much. :-) And I agree with that comment of yours on another thread. RP is a good man. But his beliefs are merely a stepping stone to further enlightenment. And that's precisely why I continue to support him - because SO MANY are still in need of that first stepping stone. Once folks can grasp things at the RP level, the rabbit hole really begins to open up. And from there, anything's possible....
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“Let them protest all they want, as long as they pay their taxes.” ...credited to Al Haig, Ronald Reagan's Secretary of State.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/liberty_outlook/
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"Let them protest all they want, as long as they pay their taxes.” ...credited to Al Haig, Ronald Reagan's Secretary of State.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/liberty_outlook/
http://www.dailypaul.com/blog/1125
Ron Paul=Red Pill
Yes, I feel the same way you
Do. I want to represent myself, anything else leads to slavery.. I hold no grudges when it comes to RP. You have to know somethings wrong to seek the truth. Famous chinese proverb, "The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step." He is merely a stepping stone to enlightenment. Now that I have been enlightened, I can't compromise my convictions and uphold a system of force or any agent that works for the system. Because it will still be a system of force by design. Without that force it ceases to exist. Many will reach the same conclusion I have, all on they're own. The truth is something not easily held down. I believe we are in a mass enlightenment stage, people are waking up to the reality of how bad we have been duped. This is why there are so many guns and ammunition sales.