Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-09 Thread ken
James A. Donald wrote:
--
On 3 Jan 2004 at 8:09, Michael Kalus wrote:
Yes, the way this usually works is that the government builds
the road, then sells it to a private company for some money
and then the upkeep is handled by the company.
It is rather seldom that someone builds a road for a business
venture.


Used to happen all the time, before governments became so
intrusive. 
Not that often.  The usual way of making  fixing roads before the 
 late 19th century was - and had been for centuries - collective. 
At best some charity or other got people together to help out. At 
worst the local lord of the manor or big landowner forced a 
sufficiently large number of peasants to do the job.

In lots of places landowners had the duty to maintain roads across 
their property, and the government would force them to do it. 
There are lots - many thousands I think - of legal records in 
England way back to the middle ages

A bit different in the western parts of USA if only because so 
many roads there are new, but even then the vast majority either 
were started by government (or some other non-commercial 
organisation) or else taken over by government after built.

Canals and railways were mostly built by private business - and 
mostly came into public ownership when they went broke, often 
bailing out the failed investors. In both Europe and North America.



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-05 Thread Declan McCullagh
On Fri, Jan 02, 2004 at 08:07:37AM -0500, Michael Kalus wrote:
 Replace Government with Society and you're getting somewhere. Where 
 will your brand new sports car go when you don't have a road to drive 
 on? Who will pay the cops when there are no taxes being collected?

These questions have been asked and answered decades ago, before many
list members were born. Take a look at Machinery of Freedom and Anarchy,
State, and Utopia, which offer different conclusions.

-Declan



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread Nostradumbass
From: bgt [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 On Sat, 2004-01-03 at 07:09, Michael Kalus wrote:
 
   Where there is no governmental police force, their is demand for
   private enforcement. And you know what? They regularly do their jobs
   better than the police.
  
  Of course there is no oversight body, so if they use excessive force 
  well, It's all part of doing business and after all they didn't smash 
  YOUR skull so what do you care, right?
 
 The only necessary oversight body is the courts. Both public and
 private police (should) operate under the Rule of Law just like everyone
 else.  As with the public police, if private police have public
 perception problems related to excessive force, abuse of power, or
 whatever, they may opt to use a third-party interest to do
 self-policing by fining, firing, etc (much like pro sports
 organizations do... contractually).  This is strictly a business
 management decision however, the only legal oversight should be 
 the court.  Police (public or private) should be judged and punished 
 (in the legal sense) in the same way any other citizen is.  

http://www.constitution.org/lrev/roots/cops.htm


Seton Hall Constitutional L.J. 2001, 685
ARE COPS CONSTITUTIONAL?
Roger Roots*


ABSTRACT


Police work is often lionized by jurists and scholars who claim to employ textualist 
and originalist methods of constitutional interpretation. Yet professional police 
were unknown to the United States in 1789, and first appeared in America almost a 
half-century after the Constitution's ratification. The Framers contemplated law 
enforcement as the duty of mostly private citizens, along with a few constables and 
sheriffs who could be called upon when necessary. This article marshals extensive 
historical and legal evidence to show that modern policing is in many ways 
inconsistent with the original intent of America's founding documents. The author 
argues that the growth of modern policing has substantially empowered the state in a 
way the Framers would regard as abhorrent to their foremost principles.



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread Steve Schear
At 01:50 PM 1/3/2004, James A. Donald wrote:
--
On 3 Jan 2004 at 8:09, Michael Kalus wrote:
 Yes, the way this usually works is that the government builds
 the road, then sells it to a private company for some money
 and then the upkeep is handled by the company.

 It is rather seldom that someone builds a road for a business
 venture.
Used to happen all the time, before governments became so
intrusive.
In the U.S. government involvement in road, bridge, railroad and canal 
building really got its start during the early- to mid-1800s.  The Whig 
Party's platform was called, by Clay, the American System.  Today we call 
it mercantilism.  The Whigs pushed their internal improvements agenda 
(building unneeded and/or grossly overpriced roads, bridges or canals 
supplied by political contributors) across all the states in the early 
1800s.  Everywhere it was a disaster bankrupting several.  So much so that 
by 1850 all state constitutions banned internal improvement 
activities.  This was the downfall of the Whigs, but many of its leaders 
resurfaced in the Republican party whose first presidential candidate was 
Lincoln.

steve 



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread Michael Kalus
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Hash: SHA1

 This is why the Tax Freedom Day approach is more useful. Tax freedom 
 day is of course the day when the average American or Brit or whatever 
 has stopped working for the government and has the rest of his income 
 for himself. For most years, this is estimated to around May-June. 
 That is, for almost half of a year a typical taxpayer is working for 
 the government.


Replace Government with Society and you're getting somewhere. Where 
will your brand new sports car go when you don't have a road to drive 
on? Who will pay the cops when there are no taxes being collected?


 Not a perfect measure, as it averages together folks of various tax 
 brackets, including the many in America who pay nothing (but it 
 doesn't assign a negative number to those who receive net net money 
 from the government). And it fails to take into account the double 
 taxation which a business owner faces: roughly a 50% tax on his 
 profits, then when the profits are disbursed to the owners of the 
 corporation, another 35-45% tax bite. For a business owner, he is 
 effectively working for the government for the first 70% of every 
 year. Which means only October-December is he working for his own 
 interests.



The business though benefits extremly from the infrastructure that is 
build with taxes. Plus a lot of companies can exempt even more money, 
so in essence a lot of companies don't pay a dime in taxes.



 Jabber about how poor people are actually receiving fewer tax benefits 
 than rich people misses the point of who's working for whom.


Yes, the poorer are working and contributing to the Riches. Always 
Remember: YOU stand on the backs of those who you despise so much.



 Alice, an engineer or pharmacist or perhaps a small business owner, 
 works between 40% and 70% of her time to pay money into government.


And how much money does she get back by services? Say: 
Homelandsecurity? Say: Roadconstruction? etc.?


 Bob, a crack addict collecting disability or welfare or other 
 government freebies, works 0% of his time for the government/society. 
 (Dat not true. I gots to stands in line to get my check increased!)


Well, why don't you just take him out and shoot him then?


 Alice is a source, Bob is a sink. Talk about how Alice gets benefits 
 ignores the fact that she's working for the government for a big chunk 
 of her life. Bob is not. Alice is a slave for the government, and 
 society, so that Bob can lounge in his mobile home watching ESPN and 
 collecting a monthly check.


And how many Bobs are out there?

Also, you forgot Fred. Fred is the guy who works for Alice, supposly 
only 40 hours a week, but they are short staffed as Alice needs to make 
sure that her investors get a good bang for the buck so Fred has been 
in reality working more to 70 hours a week and hasn't really seen his 
kids anymore. He is only paid for 40 hours though as Alice explained to 
Fred that she just doesn't have the money to pay for overtime.

Then Fred gets sick, but Alice didn't provide any benefits (after all 
she needs to make a profit for the shareholders), thus Fred has to get 
by what he has saved up while hoping that the government would give him 
some money.

 (I'd like to know why all of the folks here in California who are 
 getting benefits and services are not at my door on Saturday 
 morning to help me with my yard work. I'd like to know why finding 
 reliable yard workers has become nearly impossible in the past couple 
 of decades. Will work for food signs are a fucking joke...try hiring 
 one of those layabouts to actually do some work for food and watch the 
 sneers, or watch them threatening to fake a work injury if a shakedown 
 fee is not given to them. These people should be put in lime pits.)

blah blah blah. The world is so unfair to you. You just can't get a 
good slave anymore these days for nothing.


 When you hear John Young and Tyler Durden nattering about the persons 
 of privilege are reaping the rewards of a benificent government, 
 think about Alice and Bob and ask yourself who'se doing the real work. 
 Ask who're the sources and who're the sinks.


Fred is doing the real work, and gets a kick in the butt by Alice the 
moment he is not worth enough anymore.

You, of course, still carry the idea that everybody has the right to be 
rich. That the World doesn't have infinite resources nor that the money 
is an infinite resources is ignored by the likes of you. After all you 
have made it on the backs of all the Freds out there.

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Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread James A. Donald
--
On 3 Jan 2004 at 8:09, Michael Kalus wrote:
 Yes, the way this usually works is that the government builds
 the road, then sells it to a private company for some money
 and then the upkeep is handled by the company.

 It is rather seldom that someone builds a road for a business
 venture.

Used to happen all the time, before governments became so
intrusive. 

--digsig
 James A. Donald
 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
 r2w6MRt6gtWxRchZBu1JrSIiuDCvgG7FBMjxy3Vx
 4tEo5v7x66WtikBVLHafpzaGm84hGQZvHy0qBcgKn



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread Michael Kalus
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1


 Ever heard of toll roads? Yes, those things you drive on and pay for 
 their
 use. They work quite well in many of the socialist European countries 
 so
 they ought to work in the land of the free too.


Yes, the way this usually works is that the government builds the road, 
then sells it to a private company for some money and then the upkeep 
is handled by the company.

It is rather seldom that someone builds a road for a business venture.


 Where there is no governmental police force, their is demand for
 private enforcement. And you know what? They regularly do their jobs
 better than the police.

Of course there is no oversight body, so if they use excessive force 
well, It's all part of doing business and after all they didn't smash 
YOUR skull so what do you care, right?




 The business though benefits extremly from the infrastructure that is
 build with taxes. Plus a lot of companies can exempt even more money,
 so in essence a lot of companies don't pay a dime in taxes.

 Show me a company that doesn't pay a dime in taxes, please, make it one
 that actually has employees and does something useful and makes profit.
 Amuse me and try it out.

I don't have a link ready right now, but there were several US 
corporations as well as some in Germany who did NOT pay any taxes for 
the past couple of years because of either breaks they got so not to 
leave, OR because they posted such high losses that they did not post 
any profit on the books, thus not pay any taxes.



 Alice, an engineer or pharmacist or perhaps a small business owner,
 works between 40% and 70% of her time to pay money into government.

 And how much money does she get back by services? Say:
 Homelandsecurity? Say: Roadconstruction? etc.?

 A lot less than she would have to pay for those services in a free
 society. This is very easy to determine from the fact that a big part 
 of
 tax money goes into one social welfare scheme or another.


Assuming right now that you are living in Finland, i am wondering why 
you not move into the land of the free and do it without any social 
net?



 Take that and in addition remember that goverments tend to do things
 inefficiently (yes, that road building and security and other stuff 
 tend
 to cost more than they'd have to) and that he gets a lot of 'services'
 that have purely negative value to him (say tariffs, drug laws, 
 government
 help monopolies [AMA is first to come to mind here], etc).


I guess it depends on which study you look.

If the Army / Homeland security costs more when run by the government 
than when run by private firms the US Army should be highly efficent. 
After all WITHOUT private contractors none of the personell would be 
fed (that is done by a french catering company), without the likes of 
Halliburton and such the US Army would not be in Iraq, the support is 
pretty much outsourced for greater efficency and cost saving. Of 
course companies tend to overcharge quite a huge amount, but hey, I am 
sure at the end they are still cheaper, right?

What you fail to realize is that you get what you pay for and why 
would I want a company cut corners in things like social services, 
Security (i.e. police) or any other of these services only to save a 
buck or two?

If that is the mentality no wonder companies attach a value to human 
life and don't really care if you burn up in your car or get killed as 
long as it is cheaper than to fix a problem.

I guess that is also a reason why insurance rates for SUVs aren't up, 
while smaller cars are getting hit (Want to know why? Because if you 
die it is a one time payment and the insurance companies are off the 
hook. If you're just insured though, they pay a lot more to get you 
fixed again. SUVs tend to kill more people than maime them, thus by 
their logic they are cheaper).

But all of you who seem to think that social services et al, should be 
run on a profit maximiation basis, tell me this: How much are you worth 
in Dollars and cents (or Euros)? I would like to know how much you 
think you are worth to your friends, family, kids, spouses etc.?

Michael

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Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread Nostradumbass
From: bgt [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 On Sat, 2004-01-03 at 07:09, Michael Kalus wrote:
 
   Where there is no governmental police force, their is demand for
   private enforcement. And you know what? They regularly do their jobs
   better than the police.
  
  Of course there is no oversight body, so if they use excessive force 
  well, It's all part of doing business and after all they didn't smash 
  YOUR skull so what do you care, right?
 
 The only necessary oversight body is the courts. Both public and
 private police (should) operate under the Rule of Law just like everyone
 else.  As with the public police, if private police have public
 perception problems related to excessive force, abuse of power, or
 whatever, they may opt to use a third-party interest to do
 self-policing by fining, firing, etc (much like pro sports
 organizations do... contractually).  This is strictly a business
 management decision however, the only legal oversight should be 
 the court.  Police (public or private) should be judged and punished 
 (in the legal sense) in the same way any other citizen is.  

http://www.constitution.org/lrev/roots/cops.htm


Seton Hall Constitutional L.J. 2001, 685
ARE COPS CONSTITUTIONAL?
Roger Roots*


ABSTRACT


Police work is often lionized by jurists and scholars who claim to employ textualist 
and originalist methods of constitutional interpretation. Yet professional police 
were unknown to the United States in 1789, and first appeared in America almost a 
half-century after the Constitution's ratification. The Framers contemplated law 
enforcement as the duty of mostly private citizens, along with a few constables and 
sheriffs who could be called upon when necessary. This article marshals extensive 
historical and legal evidence to show that modern policing is in many ways 
inconsistent with the original intent of America's founding documents. The author 
argues that the growth of modern policing has substantially empowered the state in a 
way the Framers would regard as abhorrent to their foremost principles.



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread bgt
On Sat, 2004-01-03 at 07:09, Michael Kalus wrote:

  Where there is no governmental police force, their is demand for
  private enforcement. And you know what? They regularly do their jobs
  better than the police.
 
 Of course there is no oversight body, so if they use excessive force 
 well, It's all part of doing business and after all they didn't smash 
 YOUR skull so what do you care, right?

The only necessary oversight body is the courts. Both public and
private police (should) operate under the Rule of Law just like everyone
else.  As with the public police, if private police have public
perception problems related to excessive force, abuse of power, or
whatever, they may opt to use a third-party interest to do
self-policing by fining, firing, etc (much like pro sports
organizations do... contractually).  This is strictly a business
management decision however, the only legal oversight should be 
the court.  Police (public or private) should be judged and punished 
(in the legal sense) in the same way any other citizen is.  
  
  Show me a company that doesn't pay a dime in taxes, please, make it one
  that actually has employees and does something useful and makes profit.
  Amuse me and try it out.
 
 I don't have a link ready right now, but there were several US 
 corporations as well as some in Germany who did NOT pay any taxes for 
 the past couple of years because of either breaks they got so not to 
 leave, OR because they posted such high losses that they did not post 
 any profit on the books, thus not pay any taxes.

Purely for the sake of argument, even if this is correct (which I'm not
conceding), a company that is truly in business to make a profit by 
doing something useful (creating a product, providing a useful service,
etc) pays employees who pay taxes, pays employee payroll taxes, pays
shareholders who pay taxes, and produces something (product or service)
which is almost always taxed, usually in several ways. Just because a
company does not pay an income tax DOES NOT mean it isn't heavily taxed
in other direct and indirect ways.  

 But all of you who seem to think that social services et al, should be 
 run on a profit maximiation basis, tell me this: How much are you worth 
 in Dollars and cents (or Euros)? I would like to know how much you 
 think you are worth to your friends, family, kids, spouses etc.?

I'm not sure what that's got to do with it.  (We're talking about 
essential social services meaning services designed to protect lives,
right?)  How I value my life is measured by exactly what I will do to
protect and enhance my life.  I am worth to other people exactly what
they would do /voluntarily/ to protect/enhance my life.

What that's got to do with whether these services should be privatized
or not I'm not sure.  Unless you're arguing that (by that definition)
I'm not worth very much to very many other people, and since that 
leaves the responsibility for my life squarely on my own shoulders 
(and on the shoulders of people I voluntarily engage to start caring
about me!).  Well, that's the only fair way... coercing other people
to care for and by extension pay for my own welfare is immoral and
evil.  If you care so much for everyone else's welfare, there's plenty
of charities you can voluntarily donate your money to that will be 
happy to look after everyone else.  Oh, most people are selfish and
wouldn't /voluntarily/ give 30-50% of their money away to total
strangers (favoring their own families and close friends instead)?  
Then please explain how it's moral to FORCE them!

(Jeez, I just recently got back onto this list after a several-year
hiatus.  How the hell did so many statists ever get the idea that
ubiquitous cryptography would ever further their goals?  Or are they
just here to distract us with statism vs liberty type political 
debates so we can't get any real work done??)

--bgt



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread Steve Schear
At 01:50 PM 1/3/2004, James A. Donald wrote:
--
On 3 Jan 2004 at 8:09, Michael Kalus wrote:
 Yes, the way this usually works is that the government builds
 the road, then sells it to a private company for some money
 and then the upkeep is handled by the company.

 It is rather seldom that someone builds a road for a business
 venture.
Used to happen all the time, before governments became so
intrusive.
In the U.S. government involvement in road, bridge, railroad and canal 
building really got its start during the early- to mid-1800s.  The Whig 
Party's platform was called, by Clay, the American System.  Today we call 
it mercantilism.  The Whigs pushed their internal improvements agenda 
(building unneeded and/or grossly overpriced roads, bridges or canals 
supplied by political contributors) across all the states in the early 
1800s.  Everywhere it was a disaster bankrupting several.  So much so that 
by 1850 all state constitutions banned internal improvement 
activities.  This was the downfall of the Whigs, but many of its leaders 
resurfaced in the Republican party whose first presidential candidate was 
Lincoln.

steve 



If you drive, you're a slave (Re: Sources and Sinks)

2004-01-04 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 08:09 AM 1/3/04 -0500, Michael Kalus wrote:
Yes, the way this usually works is that the government builds the road,

then sells it to a private company for some money and then the upkeep
is handled by the company.

It is rather seldom that someone builds a road for a business venture.

Come visit SoCal some time.  I'll show you some roads built as
investments.
Many of them.  Sometimes, if they fail as investments (hey, we're
losing money, lets
raise tolls), the investors will sell to the govt ---the opposite of
your assertion.

But it shouldn't matter to a socialist like you: if I've driven on a
taxpayer
road, I'm therefore a slave to anyone's (or everyone's) 's need.  Anyone
who can convince a politicowhore to give them a slice, that is.



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread Tim May
On Jan 1, 2004, at 8:26 PM, Justin wrote:

Tim May (2004-01-02 02:42Z) wrote:

Bob, a crack addict collecting disability or welfare or other
government freebies, works 0% of his time for the government/society.
(Dat not true. I gots to stands in line to get my check increased!)
Do those who have previously been in the workforce, in your opinion,
have the right to reclaim through welfare any amount up to that they've
paid through taxes to the entity providing welfare/unemployment?  Or is
all unemployment money Pluto's fruit?
No, as there is no fund that this money is in. Once taxes are paid 
in, the money has gone out to crack addicts, Halliburton, welfare 
whores (excuse me, hoes), foreign dictators like Mubarek and Sharon, 
and so on.

In fact, the estimated overall debt is something like $30-40 trillion. 
I've outlined how this number is arrived at a few times in the past. As 
there are about 100 million tax filers in the U.S.--the other 175 
million being children, spouses, prisoners, welfare recipients, illegal 
aliens, non-filers, etc.--a simple calculation shows the average 
indebtedness per tax filer is around $300,000 or more. This is far, far 
beyond what the average household owns in total. Because the U.S. has 
been charging it for the past 40 years. Quibblers will say we can 
reduce this indebtedness by selling off government-owned lands, which 
would be a good start. Or be taxing corporations more, but this still 
ends up with the individual tax filers, ultimately. Or by devaluing the 
dollar dramatically, which is the likeliest strategy the kleptocrats 
will follow, after gettting enough advance warning to get their own 
assets out of dollar-denominated vehicles.

So, you see, there IS NO FUND one can withdraw money from.

Anyone claiming new welfare benefits requires even more thefts from 
those still working.

Just because money was stolen from you doesn't give you any right to 
steal from me.

--Tim May



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread Justin
Tim May (2004-01-02 02:42Z) wrote:

 Bob, a crack addict collecting disability or welfare or other 
 government freebies, works 0% of his time for the government/society. 
 (Dat not true. I gots to stands in line to get my check increased!)

Do those who have previously been in the workforce, in your opinion,
have the right to reclaim through welfare any amount up to that they've
paid through taxes to the entity providing welfare/unemployment?  Or is
all unemployment money Pluto's fruit?



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-04 Thread Justin
Tim May (2004-01-02 05:46Z) wrote:

 On Jan 1, 2004, at 8:26 PM, Justin wrote:
 
 Do those who have previously been in the workforce, in your opinion,
 have the right to reclaim through welfare any amount up to that they've
 paid through taxes to the entity providing welfare/unemployment?  Or is
 all unemployment money Pluto's fruit?
 
 No, as there is no fund that this money is in. Once taxes are paid 
 in, the money has gone out to crack addicts, Halliburton, welfare 
 whores (excuse me, hoes), foreign dictators like Mubarek and Sharon, 
 and so on.

I don't think money is as easily traceable as you'd like it to be.  Say
Bob is self-employed and hasn't payed quarterly or is employed by others
and simply doesn't withhold.  If Bob's loses his job March 31, he'd pay
his last year of income taxes at approximately the same time he became
eligible for unemployment.  Is there no time neighborhood after payment
of taxes (State taxes for this discussion) within which the collection
of unemployment is justified as collection of stolen money?

(Assume Bob earned plenty of money last year and didn't withhold, so
that the portion of his taxes allocated to unemployment covers at least
one unemployment check.  Then consider the ethics of Bob claiming just
one unemployment check.)

 Just because money was stolen from you doesn't give you any right to 
 steal from me.

Suppose Bob screws up his taxes and pays too much (2003-04), and upon
discovering his mistake the next year he refiles (2004-04).  Does he not
have any right to a refund because that money will end up being stolen
from you (2005-04, presumably)?

As for your 30-40 trillion estimate, It seems to me that including SS
payouts would make the debt unbounded.  Regardless, SS payments aren't
guaranteed so considering them as debt is faulty.




If you drive, you're a slave (Re: Sources and Sinks)

2004-01-03 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 08:09 AM 1/3/04 -0500, Michael Kalus wrote:
Yes, the way this usually works is that the government builds the road,

then sells it to a private company for some money and then the upkeep
is handled by the company.

It is rather seldom that someone builds a road for a business venture.

Come visit SoCal some time.  I'll show you some roads built as
investments.
Many of them.  Sometimes, if they fail as investments (hey, we're
losing money, lets
raise tolls), the investors will sell to the govt ---the opposite of
your assertion.

But it shouldn't matter to a socialist like you: if I've driven on a
taxpayer
road, I'm therefore a slave to anyone's (or everyone's) 's need.  Anyone
who can convince a politicowhore to give them a slice, that is.



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-03 Thread James A. Donald
--
On 3 Jan 2004 at 8:09, Michael Kalus wrote:
 Yes, the way this usually works is that the government builds
 the road, then sells it to a private company for some money
 and then the upkeep is handled by the company.

 It is rather seldom that someone builds a road for a business
 venture.

Used to happen all the time, before governments became so
intrusive. 

--digsig
 James A. Donald
 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
 r2w6MRt6gtWxRchZBu1JrSIiuDCvgG7FBMjxy3Vx
 4tEo5v7x66WtikBVLHafpzaGm84hGQZvHy0qBcgKn



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-03 Thread bgt
On Sat, 2004-01-03 at 07:09, Michael Kalus wrote:

  Where there is no governmental police force, their is demand for
  private enforcement. And you know what? They regularly do their jobs
  better than the police.
 
 Of course there is no oversight body, so if they use excessive force 
 well, It's all part of doing business and after all they didn't smash 
 YOUR skull so what do you care, right?

The only necessary oversight body is the courts. Both public and
private police (should) operate under the Rule of Law just like everyone
else.  As with the public police, if private police have public
perception problems related to excessive force, abuse of power, or
whatever, they may opt to use a third-party interest to do
self-policing by fining, firing, etc (much like pro sports
organizations do... contractually).  This is strictly a business
management decision however, the only legal oversight should be 
the court.  Police (public or private) should be judged and punished 
(in the legal sense) in the same way any other citizen is.  
  
  Show me a company that doesn't pay a dime in taxes, please, make it one
  that actually has employees and does something useful and makes profit.
  Amuse me and try it out.
 
 I don't have a link ready right now, but there were several US 
 corporations as well as some in Germany who did NOT pay any taxes for 
 the past couple of years because of either breaks they got so not to 
 leave, OR because they posted such high losses that they did not post 
 any profit on the books, thus not pay any taxes.

Purely for the sake of argument, even if this is correct (which I'm not
conceding), a company that is truly in business to make a profit by 
doing something useful (creating a product, providing a useful service,
etc) pays employees who pay taxes, pays employee payroll taxes, pays
shareholders who pay taxes, and produces something (product or service)
which is almost always taxed, usually in several ways. Just because a
company does not pay an income tax DOES NOT mean it isn't heavily taxed
in other direct and indirect ways.  

 But all of you who seem to think that social services et al, should be 
 run on a profit maximiation basis, tell me this: How much are you worth 
 in Dollars and cents (or Euros)? I would like to know how much you 
 think you are worth to your friends, family, kids, spouses etc.?

I'm not sure what that's got to do with it.  (We're talking about 
essential social services meaning services designed to protect lives,
right?)  How I value my life is measured by exactly what I will do to
protect and enhance my life.  I am worth to other people exactly what
they would do /voluntarily/ to protect/enhance my life.

What that's got to do with whether these services should be privatized
or not I'm not sure.  Unless you're arguing that (by that definition)
I'm not worth very much to very many other people, and since that 
leaves the responsibility for my life squarely on my own shoulders 
(and on the shoulders of people I voluntarily engage to start caring
about me!).  Well, that's the only fair way... coercing other people
to care for and by extension pay for my own welfare is immoral and
evil.  If you care so much for everyone else's welfare, there's plenty
of charities you can voluntarily donate your money to that will be 
happy to look after everyone else.  Oh, most people are selfish and
wouldn't /voluntarily/ give 30-50% of their money away to total
strangers (favoring their own families and close friends instead)?  
Then please explain how it's moral to FORCE them!

(Jeez, I just recently got back onto this list after a several-year
hiatus.  How the hell did so many statists ever get the idea that
ubiquitous cryptography would ever further their goals?  Or are they
just here to distract us with statism vs liberty type political 
debates so we can't get any real work done??)

--bgt



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-02 Thread Justin
Tim May (2004-01-02 05:46Z) wrote:

 On Jan 1, 2004, at 8:26 PM, Justin wrote:
 
 Do those who have previously been in the workforce, in your opinion,
 have the right to reclaim through welfare any amount up to that they've
 paid through taxes to the entity providing welfare/unemployment?  Or is
 all unemployment money Pluto's fruit?
 
 No, as there is no fund that this money is in. Once taxes are paid 
 in, the money has gone out to crack addicts, Halliburton, welfare 
 whores (excuse me, hoes), foreign dictators like Mubarek and Sharon, 
 and so on.

I don't think money is as easily traceable as you'd like it to be.  Say
Bob is self-employed and hasn't payed quarterly or is employed by others
and simply doesn't withhold.  If Bob's loses his job March 31, he'd pay
his last year of income taxes at approximately the same time he became
eligible for unemployment.  Is there no time neighborhood after payment
of taxes (State taxes for this discussion) within which the collection
of unemployment is justified as collection of stolen money?

(Assume Bob earned plenty of money last year and didn't withhold, so
that the portion of his taxes allocated to unemployment covers at least
one unemployment check.  Then consider the ethics of Bob claiming just
one unemployment check.)

 Just because money was stolen from you doesn't give you any right to 
 steal from me.

Suppose Bob screws up his taxes and pays too much (2003-04), and upon
discovering his mistake the next year he refiles (2004-04).  Does he not
have any right to a refund because that money will end up being stolen
from you (2005-04, presumably)?

As for your 30-40 trillion estimate, It seems to me that including SS
payouts would make the debt unbounded.  Regardless, SS payments aren't
guaranteed so considering them as debt is faulty.




Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-01 Thread Justin
Tim May (2004-01-02 02:42Z) wrote:

 Bob, a crack addict collecting disability or welfare or other 
 government freebies, works 0% of his time for the government/society. 
 (Dat not true. I gots to stands in line to get my check increased!)

Do those who have previously been in the workforce, in your opinion,
have the right to reclaim through welfare any amount up to that they've
paid through taxes to the entity providing welfare/unemployment?  Or is
all unemployment money Pluto's fruit?



Re: Sources and Sinks

2004-01-01 Thread Tim May
On Jan 1, 2004, at 8:26 PM, Justin wrote:

Tim May (2004-01-02 02:42Z) wrote:

Bob, a crack addict collecting disability or welfare or other
government freebies, works 0% of his time for the government/society.
(Dat not true. I gots to stands in line to get my check increased!)
Do those who have previously been in the workforce, in your opinion,
have the right to reclaim through welfare any amount up to that they've
paid through taxes to the entity providing welfare/unemployment?  Or is
all unemployment money Pluto's fruit?
No, as there is no fund that this money is in. Once taxes are paid 
in, the money has gone out to crack addicts, Halliburton, welfare 
whores (excuse me, hoes), foreign dictators like Mubarek and Sharon, 
and so on.

In fact, the estimated overall debt is something like $30-40 trillion. 
I've outlined how this number is arrived at a few times in the past. As 
there are about 100 million tax filers in the U.S.--the other 175 
million being children, spouses, prisoners, welfare recipients, illegal 
aliens, non-filers, etc.--a simple calculation shows the average 
indebtedness per tax filer is around $300,000 or more. This is far, far 
beyond what the average household owns in total. Because the U.S. has 
been charging it for the past 40 years. Quibblers will say we can 
reduce this indebtedness by selling off government-owned lands, which 
would be a good start. Or be taxing corporations more, but this still 
ends up with the individual tax filers, ultimately. Or by devaluing the 
dollar dramatically, which is the likeliest strategy the kleptocrats 
will follow, after gettting enough advance warning to get their own 
assets out of dollar-denominated vehicles.

So, you see, there IS NO FUND one can withdraw money from.

Anyone claiming new welfare benefits requires even more thefts from 
those still working.

Just because money was stolen from you doesn't give you any right to 
steal from me.

--Tim May