Taxation=Theft

Guest Post by Jeff Thomas

Theft is defined as “the taking of another person’s property or services without that person’s permission or consent.”

Almost invariably, governments pass tax laws and set tax rates without any consultation with the citizenry. Further, no final approval is sought by the citizenry that they consent to the tax or the rates. It is simply imposed.

Most of us tend not to regard taxation as theft, yet, by definition, that’s exactly what it is.

But some countries, notably the US, go further in disguising the theft, by stating that the payment of tax is “voluntary.” I personally am not aware of a single instance in which an individual or corporation decided not to pay a tax and, if discovered, was allowed to go unpunished. A typical penalty is a fine equal to the tax amount, plus compounded interest on both the tax and the fine. Such a condition is anything but voluntary.

The US also has a tradition of treating the payment of tax as being “patriotic.” Avoiding tax is deemed unpatriotic—therefore, citizens should take pride in paying tax and, in fact, many Americans do claim that they’re proud to pay tax. It would also seem likely that some resent taxation, but want to appear patriotic, whilst others truly wear taxation as a hair shirt with pride.

However, if we define taxation as what it is—theft—it would be far less likely that either of these factions would be taking this position. After all, no one takes pride in being robbed.

Some countries (again, notably the US) describe tax havens as jurisdictions that seek to undermine the tax regimes of other jurisdictions. As such, the havens are harassed and threatened by the latter and referred to as criminal money-laundering centres.

Well, let’s clear the air on that one while we’re at it.

A tax haven is quite simply a jurisdiction that has a low-tax or no-tax regime. It either steals less of people’s money than high-tax jurisdictions, or steals none of their money.

It’s ironic that the US is at the forefront of persecuting tax havens, as the US came about in 1776 as the result of abusive taxation by King George of England. (At that time, the king was demanding a whopping 2% in tax, and colonists were outraged.)

The US is most certainly no longer the home of the American ideal. In fact, it’s slowly morphed to become the exact opposite. If any of the American founding fathers were to re-appear today, they could be forgiven if they were to say, “I don’t think we’re in America anymore, Toto.”

Yet the US, along with the EU, OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), and others, has repeatedly applied pressure to tax havens and has threatened or imposed economic sanctions against them.

But, why should this be? After all, most tax havens exist in small countries where depositors are simply being offered a good deal. And, it’s important to note that what they offer is in no way criminal. So, why are the larger, tax-oppressive jurisdictions so vexed with the tax havens?

Well, first off, it’s important to understand that governments do not exist for the purpose of serving the people, as they so often claim. Their real business is to scalp the populace to as great a degree as possible, short of creating an uprising.

When viewed in this light, it’s easier to see that they’re not seeking fairness or opportunity for their people, they’re seeking to strip them of their wealth—plain and simple. Ergo, any money that flows from their citizenry to a tax haven, even though it’s done 100% legally, is money that the government failed to steal… and they want to get their hands on it.

In addition to this, the very existence of a country that has a low-tax or no-tax regime shines an unfavourable light on the larger country. Tax havens serve as a reminder that direct taxation is not even necessary to run a country.

If that seems like an impossible concept to Americans today, they only have to be reminded that income tax was introduced a mere one hundred years ago, in 1913. The US went through the industrial revolution and covered the map with railroads from coast to coast—the country’s most productive period—with no income tax.

Of course, if you stop robbing people, they’ll prosper and be more productive.

Therefore, it’s understandable if the government doesn’t wish for its populace to be reminded that a government (even in a very large country) need not rely on direct taxation.

Finally, the US is the home of the world’s foremost tax havens. (Andrew Penney from Rothschild & Co described the US as “effectively the biggest tax haven in the world”.)

The banking standards in Nevada, Delaware, Montana, South Dakota, Wyoming and New York are far below what the US demands of havens such as Jersey, Panama and the Bahamas.

In fact, the US has steadfastly refused to comply with the FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act) reporting that it demands of other countries… even though it implies that not complying suggests criminal behaviour.

But, there’s a significant difference in the US tax haven states and the tax havens overseas. Overseas havens are open to anyone, including the local populations. The US-based havens are open to anyone except Americans.

In essence, what this says is, “If you’re from France and feel that your government is stealing too much of your money through taxation, we’re happy to help you escape its clutches. But, if you’re American, we fully intend to continue robbing you.”

Benjamin Franklin was famous for saying, “In this world, nothing can be said to be certain except death and taxes.”

This is quite true, but it’s unfortunate that the statement was ever uttered, as it’s resulted in people accepting any type of tax, to whatever degree it might be imposed. Since such a guiding light as Mister Franklin accepted the concept, it’s created a blanket acceptance of any imposition of tax.

This is most unfortunate. There are some countries in the world where any new tax and/or any increase in a tax rate is fought fervently—and the population often wins. A refusal of acceptance of direct taxation, in particular, has resulted in at least one jurisdiction being 100% free of any direct taxation in all of its 500+ year history. (In fact, a sure way for a politician to be voted out is to suggest the introduction of direct taxation.)

Therefore, theft by one’s government should never be taken as a given. In many countries, the individual has no hope of escaping the government’s theft. And it’s undeniably true that Republican or Democrat, Labour or Tory, all politicians seek to rob their minions through taxation.

However, the victim should never become complacent or apathetic. Whenever an elected government robs a constituent, the act should be identified as what it is.

After all, it’s that very identification of taxation that brought freedom to the American colonies in the first instance.

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17 Comments
Llpoh
Llpoh
June 24, 2018 7:01 am

Look, I understand there has to be some tax. Govt needs some revenue in order to provide its basic functions.

But 1) it attempts to provide far more, very inefficiently, than basic functions, and 2) it transfers, at the fucking point of a gun, money from one citizen to another. And that is worse than mere theft – that is armed robbery, and it is both wrong and evil.

And it is for that reason that this system is screwed. Welfare systems grow until they consume themselves. They indeed eventually run out of other people’s money.

My blood boils when I consider this shit. Which is why I said in another thread that only a tiny portion of the population is not crazy. If a majority were sane, this could never have happened.

MadMike
MadMike
  Llpoh
June 24, 2018 12:31 pm

The problem with “I understand there has to be some tax” is that “some” is NEVER enough.
One asshole or another will happily find a reason “just a little more” is always justified for some reason. As long as someone ELSE can vote to take MY money to fund their “good idea”, this shit will never end.

Mike
Mike
  Llpoh
June 24, 2018 1:13 pm

Your first statement. “… there has to be some tax.” Go listen to Stef debunking his first caller trying to propose a reform to “necessary” government (the sort of thing we discussed in Sunday school in the 60’s) then come back and tell us why taxation.
https://www.fdrpodcasts.com/#/4109/replacing-democracy-call-in-show-may-30th-2018

And your 4th para: “… tiny portion of the population is not crazy …” Re-read Gatto’s “Underground History …” about his adventures with poor kids in NYC. Smart and motivated to work hard to replace high paid people at any job. That CANNOT be permitted, especially replacing the ruling classes – BAMN – including destroying their cognition and their souls.

subwo
subwo
  Llpoh
June 24, 2018 1:40 pm

Smaller governments of smaller populations are more responsive. I remember during the 2000 Olympics the Australian government had stamps of their gold medal winners issued within 24 hours. It takes years to have a stamp issued by the USPS postal commission and somewhat less for leftist issues but still way longer than Australia . The same year was the centennial of our submarine service and they were not going to issue a stamp until an undersea swell of submariners voiced their concerns to the elected officials.

Jack Lovett
Jack Lovett
  Llpoh
June 28, 2018 1:24 pm

This is why the world needs 7 billion governments. Damn the gov we have now.

Robert H Siddell Jr
Robert H Siddell Jr
June 24, 2018 10:02 am

I find the public school tax onerous. White parents have to send their children to private schools at great cost to get an education and still have to pay half their property tax to a communist training camp. End this tax on White parents or face a revolt.

MadMike
MadMike
June 24, 2018 12:27 pm

Taxation isn’t theft. It’s actually more like extortion.
Pay up, or else. Or else we’ll confiscate your money, your property, or your freedom.
If you really piss us off, we’ll do all three.
When done by a group of thugs, they are a gang.
When done by a group of thugs hired by a politician, they are called tax collectors and cops.
The worst “tax” of all is property tax, because it denies you the right to own anything. No matter how long your family lives on some land, the thugs called “government” always have a lien against it.
Where I live this thuggery has been going on against some properties, “owned” by the same families, for over 300 years.

Mike
Mike
June 24, 2018 1:26 pm

You’re looking a little mealy mouthed there, Jeff. THEFT is when someone sneaks in and takes something while you’re gone. Looters and the FED seem to fit that. When someone openly and arrogantly sticks a gun in your back and says “peacefully pay me or I’ll shoot you”, that’s ARMED ROBBERY.

It doesn’t matter how many steps of their pretend “legal process” in between, if you continue to insist on minding your own business, the robber will commit a home invasion and murder – (not “kill”) you. Not optimum for him, because then you can’t be a repeat victim; but hey, as they say, “there’s a sucker born every minute”.

You need to stop beating a dead sheep. Frank Chodoroff said it all in 1952. Irwin Schiff’s heroics in the 70’s fell on deaf ears. Even now Marc Stevens has what, a thousand listeners? Zooming out, Ayn Rand laid out the complete philosophical case for zerogov for individuals in 1943 and for communities of men in 1957.

The Forced Public School Daycare Lack of Concentration Camps will continue to churn out spineless collectivists ignorant of their plight until they cost so much to do so little that they collapse. Perhaps local insurrections forever abolishing property tax is the way to start. Property Tax is the root of all evil. If you have to rent your property from nameless thugs armed with only the “legitimacy” their paid mouthpieces claim, you cannot own property, and you have NO rights, even to your life. And without property tax, there can be no forced schooling to spread the bigguv mind virus.

Why was it pounded into us kids in kindergarten to “Don’t Hit Other People And Take Their Stuff”? Everyone knows society will collapse all the way down past communities and below tribes and finally to “Lord of the Flies” battle of all against all without that rule. That is the root of the Zero Aggression Principle (stronger than the NAP – thanks Bad Quaker) that perhaps needs to be re-formulated as The OneLaw – Murder is forbidden.

We who know, and can speak effectively, need to campaign for a positive, NOT fight a negative. OneLaw of course has derivations of the principle to cover robbery, theft and injury, etc, and all indirect threats of murder. But tyrants have ruled for at least five millennia by getting people into rabbinical arguments about hair splitting differences about what law is or should be. Like this article.

Literally ALL “laws” in existence are merely Written WHIM. They all need to be repealed. Financial collapse metastasizing to NROL will be the ultimate repealor. And the Remnant will find that “democracy” only works well in groups or tribes of 150 or less. And if spread far enough, start enacting OneLaw, and “reverencing” Contracts, perhaps even as a “religion”.

TampaRed
TampaRed
June 24, 2018 1:45 pm

this is the weekly newsletter of a couple of weeks ago from my former congressman–i was redistricted into another district but stayed on the email list–
this is from a “conservative” republican–
there’s not a word in the entire letter about cutting the size of govt but what really pisses me off is the 1st blurb–congress reallocated billions of unspent $ from multiple depts & instead of reducing the budget they spent the $–
https://iqconnect.lmhostediq.com/iqextranet/view_newsletter.aspx?id=205061&c=FL12GB

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
June 24, 2018 2:15 pm

I refused the alleged free public school system for my child at a great out of pocket expense . I got my money’s worth for their education . I also paid the full “boat” for property tax to the local government allegedly for the failing school system who’s appointed superintendent was a fraud and an embezzler . When he addressed the graduating class of a nephew of mine his opening statement speaks volumes : “WHEN YOUALL LEAVE UP OUTTA HERE . This is the Ebonics bo bo bull shit my tax money was pissed away on . Then there was the time period we were investigating the highly rated public school our children would start kindergarten in and the representive speaking to the parents of potential incoming students : “ EVERY CHILE BEEZ IMPOTENT TO ACHIEVES”
Now my legislaters running for Office exclaim we have not had a tax increase in 30 years which is absolute bull shit . My response is your wasting too much of what you get now and you want more .
I keep getting a smell of tar and feathers !
For to long now the American government elected representitives do not fear the citizens . This point alone must be one of the first to change . Our government must again fear the actions of orginized armed citizens not the other way around !

MadMike
MadMike
  Boat Guy
June 24, 2018 2:53 pm

Yeah, and an average of 750,000 citizens per “legislator” ain’t much representation.

“Taxation with representation ain’t so hot either.”
-Gerald Barzan

Ralsballs
Ralsballs
June 24, 2018 8:14 pm

US citizens pay income tax. US citizens have no rights. If you are stupid enough to call yourself a US citizen, then take what is coming to you. Do you have a social security number? If you said yes, you are a moron, a slave, and a subject . You traded your birthright for some shitty benefits and privileges. Educate yourselves, or continue to be dumbfucks and get assfucked slaves! Your choice?

Ralsballs
Ralsballs
  Ralsballs
June 25, 2018 12:23 pm

[2] Subtitle A of the Internal Revenue Act of 1954, Title 26 of the United States Code, was enacted in accordance with Congress’ constitutional power to lay and collect an income tax. There is a tax imposed, in 26 U.S.C. s 1, on the income of “every individual.” No provision exists in the tax code exempting from taxation persons who, like Slater, characterize themselves as somehow standing apart from the American polity, and the defendant cites no authority supporting his position. Slater’s protestations to the effect that he derives no benefit from the United States government have no bearing on his legal obligation to pay income taxes. Cook v. Tait, 265 U.S. 47, 44 S.Ct. 444, 68 L.Ed. 895 (1924); Benitez Rexach v. United States, 390 F.2d 631 (1st Cir.), cert. denied 393 U.S. 833, 89 S.Ct. 103, 21 L.Ed.2d 103 (1968).
Unless the defendant can
establish that he is not a citizen of the United States, the IRS possesses authority to attempt to determine his
federal tax liability.

Grizzly Bare
Grizzly Bare
June 24, 2018 10:50 pm

Taxes are about power and nothing else. Keeping the power in the hands of the few and out of the hands of the many. Wealth is power. Knowledge is power. There is power in numbers. The assholes who pull the strings figured it out a long time ago how to keep us poor, spending all our time on the treadmill, just to make ends meet. How to keep us in a soporific hypnotized stupor. How to dumb us down as individuals and as a culture to the lowest common denominator. How to keep us divided and always seeing each other as the enemy, rather than recognizing the real enemy who is behind the curtain pulling the levers.

Taxes are the main mechanism they use to keep us on bended knee, supplicating. The cocksuckers have a myriad of ways to obtain wealth, from fractional reserve lending, to drug running, to the petrodollar. They could probably have plenty without dipping into our pockets at every turn, but it’s the taxes that keep us subjugated and begging our masters for permission for every little action we might wish to take.

You want to end the tyranny? Start figuring out how to think like a free man. Stop acting like a slave and find whatever ways you can, legal or otherwise, to stop paying taxes. Stop buying crap you don’t need for a good start. Not only will you deprive big bro of his cut, but you’ll also avoid debt which is the same thing as stealing from your future self. Avoiding debt is crucial also because the way the central bank has things arranged through fractional reserve lending, every time you borrow money from a bank you are creating new currency into the system, giving them more power at the same time your are diminishing your own power.

jmo
jmo
June 25, 2018 8:14 am

please tell us where that one jurisdiction is that has 100% no tax.

Grizzly Bare
Grizzly Bare
  jmo
June 26, 2018 4:17 pm

Maybe too broad a definition of jurisdiction for you but, black markets, the underground economy, bartering to name a few off the top of my head.