rEvolutionist wrote:Seth wrote:rEvolutionist wrote:I said "inheritance and power games" are not real work. Fighting for cystic fibrosis sufferers is not a "power game".
Fuzzy thinking there, rEv. Of course it is, it's a power game to garner money to fight cystic fibrosis and benefit those who have it. Every single person or group that petitions government for redress of grievances (or just for largess from the public treasury) is a "special interest group" because each of them has a special interest in getting government to benefit them or their cause to a greater degree than some other group or cause.
You might, for example, contribute money to a PAC or corporation (oooh the EVIL) which advocates for higher taxes, or less pollution, or greater wealth equality. All you're doing is hiring someone else to speak for you in the halls of government because you cannot do so yourself, directly. What's wrong with that?
I just don't accept, and I don't think anyone can rationally accept, that there is no moral difference between different lobbying activities. I'm not an objective moralist, so I need to be careful how I state such things, but reasonable moral assessments can be made I think.
It's all free speech. Just because you don't like the message doesn't mean there's a moral difference.
Regarding your second part about inheritance - well, it depends on how much it was taxed in his life. You have to look at the overall tax burden to compare different distributions of taxation. Anyway, regarding why he possibly shouldn't be able to transfer it unencumbered - because the money might be better spent being reinvested in society. Paris Hilton might miss out on a couple of hundred mil, but she won't have to trip over so many poor beggars on her journey between her front doorstep and her limo.

Why must we look at the "overall tax burden?" If the plumber, or Paris Hilton, pays the required taxes each year on the money they have or earn, that's all they are required to do. When they die, all that capital has been fully taxed when earned. Why should it be taxed again?
Why shouldn't it? Both are arbitrary assessments.
Evasion. You said "because the money might be better spent being reinvested in society." Who gave you license to make such a determination? What moral argument do you make that government is better equipped to decide where anyone's money is spent than they are? It's self evident that government is NOT better equipped to do so, otherwise we would not be borrowing 45 cents of every dollar the government spends from our grandchildren.
You're just expressing class-based envy and jealousy here. You demean Paris Hilton because she has lots of money and you don't, and so you want more of her money. That's the sum total of your philosophy, and that of Marx as well. That makes you a Marxist, plain and simple.
This is just the lazy way free marketeerers dismiss arguments against them. I can equally say that your approach is class-based hatred. And indeed it is, as you've clearly stated in the past. In the case of me, it is easy to dismiss your empty claim, as I see a big difference between the Paris Hilton's of the world and the Bill Gates's of the world. It's got little to do with wealth alone.
Who cares what you think? You're just envious of other people's wealth and lifestyle. That's no rational or moral basis for public policy decisionmaking. It's their money, they can do with it what they like, and just because you think you could make better use of it doesn't give you any moral suasion to take it from them.
Someone else is better at generating wealth than you are, and someone else has more wealth than you do, so you feel entitled to tell them how much wealth they may retain while you redistribute the rest for your personal economic benefit.
Your psychological make up is obviously so different from some others in society that you apparently just can't see how some people actually do care about others less fortunate than them. And that says more about you than me, I'm afraid.
Screw you. And you're wrong, it is YOU who has a malformed, infantile personality disorder typical of liberals. People who actually care about others
give to others voluntarily out of an adult and mature sense of charity, altruism and enlightened self-interest. Immature, insane liberals such as yourself insist that THEIR metric of "caring" must be forced on other people against their will, and that they (the deranged and personality-stunted liberals) are best equipped to decide who must give what to whom in order to assuage the liberal guilt of being better off than someone else. It's pure insanity and liberals ought to be hospitalized until they grow up.
Your basic argument is that people must be FORCED by government to be "charitable" by taxing them, which is nothing more than enslaving them to the service of people they don't know and may not care about, much less accepted financial responsibility for.
That's the philosophy of the thief.
It's the philosophy of a socially-oriented individual who cares about people who are less fortunate than him.
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It's the philosophy of the THIEF, nothing more. You may donate whatever of your labor and property you feel compelled to donate to those who are less fortunate. You've always been free to do so. But that's NOT what you're advocating for. You're advocating for stealing OTHER PEOPLE'S labor and property to fulfill YOUR perceived need for "social justice," even though those people may have already given what they are able to give voluntarily to someone else.
That's pure, unadulterated thievery. Their labor and property
are not yours to dispose of as you see fit, and the same applies to government. Their labor is theirs and THEY get to decide who is worthy of receiving it as a charitable gift, not you, and not anyone else.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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