I thnk it should be obvious, but I guess it needs saying: I disagree with you on this.
I think it should be obvious, but I guess it needs saying:No you don't, and you actually prove this in the next paragraph
You really know nothing about the current state of the philosophy, do you? Dr. Hsieh is against taxation entirely. Leonard Piekoff, as I recall, advocates a limited taxation. Personally, I think any contract should include a tax, to pay for the enforcement of that contract.
And here is a perfect starting point as to why you don't. You already assume that society has an obligation to tax a contract.
This right here is an encroachment on my rights to enter into any contract I so choose. Furthermore, I'm pretty certain your objectivist society will make my use of violence against another illegal with the exception of self defense. This is a restriction on freedom and
assumes an objective morality. What Objectivists fail to understand is that simply calling the philosophy "objective" does not make it objective reality. "Rights" are a complete social and cultural construction. There is nothing objective about them
But again, you're committing the Is/Ought Fallacy. If you limit the government to its proper role--protecting citizens from force and fraud--you don't NEED a huge tax base.
It's not a fallacy when you propose a perpetual motion machine and tell you that it violates the laws of physics. Pointing out facts can't be dismissed as is/ought
Nothing you've said thus far, including the pointless commentary on my income, is anything but "This is the way things are now". I mean, look at this line:
The commentary on
our income was not at all pointless. Do you imagine the building of roads will become affordable when the government get's out of the way? Schools will be cheaper? Hospitals? Fire departments? No, all of these things are very expensive. I suspect you've never actually looked at the expenses of developing a private road. I happen to know that building a quarter mile of gravel driveway (a one way road) is out of my reach. And maintaining it is a pain in the ass too.
OUR income comes into this equation because you and I are not likely able to pay for the infrastructure that we depend on (unless you're one of the 1%). I was pointing out that, even for the top tier income bracket, the cost of building and maintaining the infrastructure necessary for the standard of living that I think people
deserve is out of reach. Taxes must be collected.
The translation of this is: It won't work today, under the current system, therefore it's impossible.
No, that's not exactly the proper translation, see above. For further clarification, let me point out that we can't depend on the charity of the 1%ers to provide us with anything but a feudal society. This is fact and has been demonstrated throughout history. If I'm starving, my "Objective rights" mean nothing. You and I are slaves to whomever will give us a scrap of food, and the Koch brothers won't give me any more than a scrap because there is nothing to force them too. And no amount of boycotting them for their greed and unfair labor practice is going to matter because there'll be no one to do it, you and I will be fighting over that scrap of food.
Unless you plan on a vast redistribution of wealth before we change over to an objectivist society, it will not work. And the gradual change over will simply concentrate material wealth in the hands of a smaller and richer elite.
Is/WILL HAPPEN because history shows us this.
Until you're willing to accept that I'm talking about a different system, any further discussion on this point is wasted.
I accept totally that you're talking about a different system. The one you're talking about requires a huge leap of faith in the charity of the very wealthy. You honestly think you'll have the power (financial or legal) to pry the wealth from the very small minority who control it now without
force of government on your side? In an objectivist society you will be simply be one of the poor and you will only be able to drop further into poverty.
Again, you really are ignorant of the philosophy. Rand herself discussed this point: having other people around is a value, but it is not the PARAMOUNT value. Most Objectivists I know are quite gregarious, in fact. They understand the value of having other people around, and understand the value of other people in an economy particularly well. Nothing in Objectivism says that we must survive on our own without any interactions with others. In fact, a great deal of the work in this philosophy amounts to answering the question of how to interact with others.
I'm sure you're a fun guy to hang out with and so are many objectivists. But the billionaires dont care. They have plenty of friends at the country club, though they may find you a pleasant person to chat with while you're holding their towel for them. But outside of that, you'll be gregarious with your other poor friends in the vast slums that exist around the giant estates run by the 1%.
What you don't seem to understand is that the second million is a lot easier to make than the first. As you control a certain more wealth, it becomes exponentially easier to both make
and take more.
The objective reality which you refuse to see is this;
Without government regulation and coercion, wealth becomes more concentrated, not less.
No, not really. Not in the long run. In the long run, the "other options" are merely increased subsurviance to collectivized society.
Actually, this has not been the historic trend. Freedoms exist only in that they may be exercised. Abject poverty renders freedoms meaningless. The cost of reducing abject poverty requires taxing the very wealthy. Why is this such a crime to objectivists? Like I said, the pretzel logic and mental gymnastics of "Objectivist thought" all come down to "I hate paying taxes". Why is the idea of paying taxes considered "subservience"?
And you really should learn what Rand meant when she said that phrase.
I know exactly what she meant when she said that phrase. It was an appeal to emotion. It had nothing to do with reality. It was a way of dressing up her philosophically bankrupt idealism.
Humans are rational beings
Actually, not, they're not. Humans are motivated almost exclusively by emotional drives. Some are more successful at using rationality to satisfy those drives, some less so.
--and sometimes that means interacting with others on a rational basis. You seem to be laboring under the impression that O'ists beleive that hermits are the ideal--alone, cut off from society, without interaction with anyone.
No, I am not. I am under the impression that objectivists
believe that it is a viable option and that man somehow evolved outside of culture and social structure. I
know otherwise.
They're not. The ideal in O'ism is the businessman: a trader who gets value for value, and who interacts with people constantly. Her heros were scientists, industrialists, teachers, etc.--hardly a philosophy that advocates hermits.
So the ideal is not what most humans are. Most humans are laborers. Most are mediocre. But the world would grind to a halt if they ever stopped their work. All the industrialists and scientists and teachers would starve without them. Objectivists would have them (and their children, regardless of talent) condemned to serfdom.
In fact, historically it's Christianity, which is a collectivistic religion at heart, that lead to the rise of hermits. Something to think about: an individualistic philosophy that advocates dealing with people on a rational basis leads to peolpe gathering together, while a collectivistic religion that stresses asceticism leads to hermits alone in the desert.
Actually, humans invented Christianity, like they invented a lot of social structures, to give meaning to their instinctive need for community. Since most Christians weren't hermetic I don't see that the data supports your assertion.