The IRS automatically taxes servers on their tickets. So the question becomes whether its moral to not report tips that exceed the amount ( IIRC 8%) that the IRS assumed you got.
My answer: Depends if you're a Libertarian. As long as you're voting to tax other people, it's immoral for you not to pay the amount that those other people have decided is your fair share.
Well, let's see, that's quite the pandora's box you're opening:If it's moral to cheat on your taxes( and not reporting tips is cheating on your taxes), then would it be moral for your children to be prevented by an outsider from going to public school? would it be moral for you to be prevented from driving on public roads? Would it be moral to just not give your social security pension when you reach 65?
Its about as moral to not report tips to the IRS as it is to forcibly take money against someone's will.
Well, let's see, that's quite the pandora's box you're opening:
Is it moral to force someone to pay what you determine is a "fair share" of their tax dollars to go to things that they oppose or don't use? Because if I could decide where my tax dollars went (or at least if they used our tax dollars responsibly), then I'd agree it'd be immoral to not pay for what I use. However, the amount of things your taxed on in life (pretty much anything and everything) is only trumped by the number of ways they waste those tax dollars.
Is it moral for the government to set up a tax system that's further in scope than the one our founders opposed with "tea parties"?
Is it moral for them to force us into social security and then use the money for overseas wars, with us younger folks probably unlikely to see a dime from the ponzi scheme we're forced to pay into?
Is it moral for the federal government to rack up trillions in debt with no plan to balance the budget for another 28 years, and pay for it and the interest with my tax dollars, essentially making me and my children responsible for their irresponsibility?
Is it moral that a person who makes more and uses less services should pay a big chunk of their hard-earned income, while another might pay as little as zero and use far more services? Further, is it moral to force one person to pay for someone else who may have no desire to work? Is it moral to subsidize drug addictions?
Is it moral to devalue (essentially a hidden tax) people's money by counterfeiting more money on top of what you tax and borrow?
Does that just about cover it, cuz I could probably go all day.... They're going to find a way to tax you on anything and everything they can, so any chance you have to deal in cash under the table, I say go for it when you can.
This just crossed my mind. I'm not working as a waiter, but I have considered it. If you see your tip lying on a table, it seems like nobody would know if you acted like half of it wasn't there and just stuffed it in your pocket. Of course, I don't think anyone's going to believe you if you report 0 tips.
The question is, is it moral to lie if the IRS shouldn't have the money anyway? Most people will scoff at this question, but others I know would also have questions about this. I have a firm conviction against lying, but I'm not sure how this could even be considered that since it is to protect your rightful earnings.
That is reality, not morality.The fact of the matter is that these programs exist, and they have been funded with people's tax money.
No, it's not moral, and that's why I mentioned the social security ponzi scheme in my reply... Is it moral that they don't allow me to opt out of a savings account that I'm forced into, and likely won't see my money back from? SS is not meant to be a tax, they jsut use it as one.If you went to take advantage of say... social security, would it be moral for the distribute to decide to give you less money than you're supposed to be entitled to?
The universe. Morality is not relative.
Morality in a political sense is based on natural law. All political morality stems from every person having ownership of themselves, the fruits of their labor, the fruits of voluntary trade, and ownership of of discovered resources that a person puts into use (ie. life, liberty, property). There can be religious morality that goes above and beyond political morality (such as the Mennonite belief that killing is wrong even in self defense.)The universe decides morality? Who is the universe that it has such a mind? Is it an intelligent being, perhaps?