eduardo89
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 29, 2009
- Messages
- 21,295
Identifying the fact of natural liberty.Oh, that's easy. Just call it a birthright.
Rights are things we inherit from our forebears without having to work or pay for them.An equal and inalienable "right of access and usage" inheritance. Then we all become joint heirs, fully and equally entitled, in theory, with no labor required.
Someone here evidently is projecting....The state is not the owner, but rather more like the executor of a will. This will never gets fully executed, of course. The heirs are treated as minors, idiots, incompetents
Pure fabrication.- wards of the state in perpetuity, under the governance of local trustees who must be appointed/elected/whatever.
Innat wonderful?
The joint heirs remain joint heirs forever - but only as joint wards of the [e]state.
Another fabrication. Everyone is at liberty to be as close to the center as they please -- but the closer to the center they want to be, the less land they will be able to deprive others of without making just compensation.There are no individual claims of ownership of land, as that would violate the equal claims of the others (in that community only). Furthermore, the strength of your individual claim of access and usage very much depends on your proximity to the center of the community - with a Catch-22, as proximity to the center is also dependent on your ability and willingness to pay more than your fellow so-called heirs - given they will give more in return for what has been taken from you (and everyone else).
Correct.This all forms a nice theoretical circle of value returned by others in exchange for value taken from you, as a member of the community.
One you will no doubt now make up.How these "returns of value" get back to you and the others is another story.
"Not returned directly"? I don't know how it could be returned any more directly. Certainly the value taken is returned, in the form of the universal individual exemption. This restoration of the individual right to liberty, enabling all to use enough good land to live on for free, is a very direct return of the value taken by those who exclude others from more good land than their own share. It is indeed more direct than a cash payment, as there is no intermediate transfer of value through the state's hands.It is not returned directly to you or any other joint heir.
You are not a shareholder in the community, as the community cannot be owned and is therefore not a corporation.The community is acting as a corporation, which may or may not pay any dividends, and which may or may not owe you, an equal shareholder, anything at all.
Steven speaks only for his own likely condition should he be relieved of his unjust privileges.You, me, and everyone else, who are tantamount to idiots and wards of the state,
That is why if the state is not democratic, it functions effectively as a private landowner like Saudi Arabia, which is the Saud family's private estate.cannot receive a return of stolen value directly. This "return of value", in the form of land rents collected, is to the [e]state itself only, not to you, which state will then decide what to do that is in the best interests of the estate. This is why it is a form of fascism, or statist capitalism, with the full assumption that whatever serves the best interests of the estate is also in the best interests of the wards, or "joint heirs" thereof.
As your exemption gives you free access to it. Right.In other words, whatever the state collects and uses, even if all the majority of that revenue was used to provide more infrastructure to the center of the community, is all counted as full remuneration to you.
No, it does not. The farther out you are, the more land you can use for free.That is where the Catch-22 comes full circle, because the strength and quality of your "equal right of access and usage" claim, as a ward of the trustees who exercise full control of the rules of the estate, fully depends on your proximity to the center of that estate/community.
Lie refuted above. There is merely a trade-off between proximity to the center and the amount of land you can use for free.In other words, you have to be in a community to have any claim, but proximity to the center once you are in the community boundaries is only available to those who can promise to pay more.
"Somehow" meaning, "in fact."Those who are in the center: pay the most, and have the greatest claim. The further you get from the center, the less you pay, and the less claim you have.
Oh, and when a community provides infrastructure, so that you can have an easier commute from the outskirts to the center - that somehow counts as better "access" to the center. Not exclusive usage. Just "access".
Yes. You can. Stop telling stupid lies.You have a pioneering spirit, and recognize that there is PLENTY of land available on the Earth, for which you, a proper and devout believer in Georgist/Geoist principles, have an equal right of access to - one that extends to use of ALL other lands, most of which is unused. Just go completely out of that community, you think, and into between-community lands that no community uses. From there you may not even have to compete with those in other communities. But you might be able, given enough time. Why, you can establish a community of your own.
No. You cannot do that.
That is a lie. You are perfectly at liberty to use them. Just not to OWN them.That forbidden fruit is the rank hypocrisy of Georgist ideology's Garden of Eden Collectives, as you will not be permitted to use, and you will have no claim on, between-community lands.
That is another stupid lie, Steven. Why are you telling so many stupid lies?Too many of your fellow Georgist ideologues have erroneously concluded that community precedes all else; not just as a matter of possibility, but by legislative decree. Thus, you may not live without proximity to an already existing, established community.
You are lying, Steven. LYING.Not because you are unable, or physically incapable, but because the state will not permit it.
That is a LIE.Communities are FIAT.
You are free to not belong to a community. You just aren't free to violate the rights of those who do.Like legal tender, it is not a question of whether you will belong to an existing community, but only which community you will belong to at any given time.
And you accuse ME of being unrealistic?? ROTFL!! I have said before that I consider it impossible for Ron Paul to become the Republican nominee for president. The system is simply too thoroughly corrupted by money, greed and privilege.Roy, you stink. Seriously, this is the eve of our Victory,
I'm just refuting fallacious, absurd and dishonest claims.and you're going to come in here spouting your junk like nothing even happened?
Congratulations! But I still think Ron Paul's solid second-place finishes in Iowa and NH are more of an intellectual and moral victory for liberty than a harbinger of genuine political victory.At least congratulate us on a great showing for the cause of Liberty and for Ron Paul.
Others, who unlike you are honest and willing to know facts, disagree with you.Also, in case you didn't know, your posts are completely worthless.
You know that is a lie. I refute, and then refute, and then refute some more.You just spew. And then you spew. And then you spew some more.
I am aware that anger is not an attractive emotion, but IMO it is the only appropriate human response to two Holocausts a year, year after decade after century after millennium. Maybe you can watch the boot stamping on the face of humanity, forever, and think to yourself, "Just as long as I could be the one wearing the boot...." (even though it is in fact your face and the faces of your loved ones that are getting stomped). I can't do that.You are the worst emissary LVT has ever had. Any cause you even remotely support any healthy, happy person would seriously question and rethink whether they wanted to be part of, just because someone like you is associated with it.
I've done all those things. How would your advice differ from the advice given to those who opposed slavery or Naziism with the appropriate level of passion?You really need to get your life in order, get some happiness, focus on things in your own life that you have control over, set goals and achieve them, etc.
No. I am aware that my inability to just accept the greatest evil in the history of the world and get on with my life is a handicap. But I am not the author of that evil, and my response to it is not something I am doing to myself. Could the abolitionists, or those who opposed the Nazis, just ignore the evil they saw and get on with their lives? Not if they were anything like me, they couldn't.This mania for LVT is really dragging you down. I'm telling you, it's not my and Steven's overwhelming evil that's making you physically ill to read our posts. You're doing that to yourself.
Uhh... who cares?And you accuse ME of being unrealistic?? ROTFL!! I have said before that I consider it impossible for Ron Paul to become the Republican nominee for president. The system is simply too thoroughly corrupted by money, greed and privilege.
Thank you. There, see, if you were sincere and believable there, you would have gained some pathos points with this.Congratulations!
What kind of victory did you think I was talking about? Of course it was an intellectual victory. This is a long-term movement. We all understand that. Were in this for the long haul. "It’s not like I’m just trying to win and get elected. I’m trying to change the course of history." -- Ron PaulBut I still think Ron Paul's solid second-place finishes in Iowa and NH are more of an intellectual and moral victory for liberty than a harbinger of genuine political victory.
I've never been able to understand how anyone could imagine that is an objection of any interest. It's like I'm explaining the principles of a healthy diet to you, and you're saying, "Nobody is going to follow your diet plan exactly, Roy. They are going to eat birthday cake on their birthdays, even though you think cake is not very healthy. So much for your diet plan. You just refuse to see that it is other people who are choosing the food they eat, not you." I am unable rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could prompt such comments.What Roy refuses (fails?) to see is that his particular plan will not be adopted by anyone, and would not be implemented or administered by Roy.
So? There are lots of diets out there, too. There is lots of disagreement about details. But every competent dietician and nutritionist knows there are certain principles underlying all healthful diets.It would not be according to Roy's special sets of rules, principles, and governing assumptions. I've seen what a lot of the others favoring or implementing LVT are doing, and it none of it quite matches what Roy is advancing.
I would not be choosing the food other people eat, either. That doesn't mean nothing I could say about diet has any validity.Whatever Roy thinks is the perfect formula or rule for LVT would have very little to do with anything at all, as Roy would not determine rent value assessment formulae, he would not be in charge of zoning, or determining which lands were available for public usage.
I am only saying what would happen if certain reforms were enacted. I have never claimed to be predicting what WILL happen -- other than my prediction, which has always come true and always will come true, that all apologists for landowner privilege inevitably lie.Roy really does believe that an exemption would give each individual enough good, free land to live on - that this wouldn't be tampered with by anyone, such that an exemption reduced everyone to a postage stamp of available dirt, so that everyone would end up having to pay a whopper of a difference in LVT anyway. I take Roy's word at that. Roy's word. Only. Only if Roy was king, and only for as long as Roy was alive. I would actually trust Roy with an LVT. But I wouldn't trust anyone else.
They already did and do now because they have to fund the welfare subsidy giveaway to landowners.Roy really believes that the LVT, as a "single tax" solution, would somehow satisfy government (all government at all levels, no less), and that the reality of any other taxes would not creep in and take over as additional revenue streams and layers of additional taxes, and taxes on taxes, after the fact. You know, like they already did, and do now.
I am not an altruist, and unlike you I don't anthropomorphize or impute motives to the state.Roy believes in how he would implement LVT so much that he imputes his own altruism to the state.
While the state made Swaziland much like Somalia, it also made Switzerland and many other countries not like Somalia. The fact that many foods are unhealthy is not a good reason to stop eating altogether.Which makes me think, "SERIOUSLY, ROY?" What did the state ever do to earn that kind of "meeza lubs and twusts gubmint!" devotion?
No, I just understand, as you do not, how landowner privilege is at the root of many of the problems you have with the state.To know how our particular state would treat any plan (including our own Constitution, for that matter) in terms of a likelihood that the plan would be distorted, warped, abused, debased, corrupted, ignored, abridged, usurped, etc., we need only look at our present, and our own history. Roy doesn't seem to think it's an issue.
It cannot be trusted WHEN ITS TASK IS TO SERVE LANDOWNERS.I see LVT as accomplishing only ONE thing - the abolishment of landownership. That's all. More power to the state, and an additional revenue stream to boot, for a state that has already proved its own corruption time and again, such that it cannot be trusted with the simplest of tasks.
[The state] cannot be trusted WHEN ITS TASK IS TO SERVE LANDOWNERS.
It seems to me the basis of concern stems from this: that a truly free society then means that naturally a man is indeed with in his Rights to deny others the use of or any portion of that which is his, whether it is his property, or his labor.
I would say yes, though whether that Creator is an actual person or the ineffable forces of physics and the Anthropic Principle does not affect the conclusion.In what I have read, there seem to me to be an omission that is fundamental to a free society. Doesn't the Natural Law that endows us all with the very rights at the heart of this discussion, imply a Creator granted us such rights?
I would again say yes. And I take the side of total unabridged freedom. That needs to be our ideology and our goal.If, accepting this as the basis for Natural Law, the law that endows all with their life, liberty and property, is the foundation for a free society. Anything that violates this is a violation of that most basic of all truths. If we accept this, then it seems clear to me any form of property taxation is a violation. This discussion about how much violation is acceptable in what would then be an almost free society seems irrelevant as there is no such thing, either you are free or you are not.
I don't know that we need to discuss it. The Crusoe scenario is totally at odds with my own conception of what reality is, but it does reinforce the Georgist's mental model of what they think reality is: a place where mean, nasty landowners are constantly oppressing everyone by the mere fact of their owning land.Yet, we must discuss it. It seems to me the basis of concern stems from this: that a truly free society then means that naturally a man is indeed with in his Rights to deny others the use of or any portion of that which is his, whether it is his property, or his labor. And this indeed means that there is the possibility that some shipwrecked penniless man would be at the utter disposal of the man who owns that on which the other is shipwrecked.(I'll omit the debate on what constitutes ownership out, as I don't believe it has bearing either way on my point)
I would agree that we're basically good in many ways. Civilization of any kind would be pretty impossible if we weren't. Even more fundamentally important to our nature than any basic goodness or basic evilness is this: that men are basically free, to choose whether to be good or evil.It may be naturally within man to hoard what is his. And it seems to me that much of the discussion here assumes that man is basically evil. I disagree. I think Men are basically good.
I agree that it probably doesn't. It has to at least seem good.There will be those men that do bad, and men are inclined to corruption, and evil. But men are also good and most will help others when perceived to be needed. This often is so strong, that people ironically become tyrannical, in their efforts to do good. This drives many people to do what they do. Most people who support socialism, support it out of the desire to do good. People want to help their fellow man. Free people want to promote freedom, thus the cycle of freedom and despotism ensues. Man cares about other men so much, that he becomes tyrannical in making everyone "free". Those wholly evil know this basic law of nature and use it to their advantage. How does any massive societal change ever occur if not under the guise of doing good?
Indeed.Therefore the best form which will help the most people, is it not one of freedom?
I would say yes, yes, and yes.Is it the concern that people will suffer, if everyone is indeed allowed to exercise complete freedom? Is the implication of a safeguard to address the concern, one that always leads to despotism? To somehow ensure that all men do good, must we violate the rights of all men?
No, it would NOT be serving them, it would be TRADING with them by mutual consent, as they would be repaying the full value of what they took. That is the point....or the highest bidding landholders it would serve under LVT.
That betrays a fundamental misconception of what states are. Trust is not a concept that applies to them.States are not to be trusted, period.
"Meeza hatesa gubmint." We know. What we don't know is what might be meant by "unleashing" or "uncaging" a state.You don't judge them on their stated intents, but only by the broadest reaches of power conceivable, which it will always seek to extend outward from its necessarily limited purposes. States are like wild, power-hungry, disobedient animals by default. You don't unleash or uncage them for any reason. Ever.
No, such claims are absurd. A building is also a product of men's wants, needs and desires, but it is nonsensical to anthropomorphize it.They can be anthropomorphized because they are the products of men and their wants, needs and desires.
No, history shows that states are the only thing stopping landowners from enslaving you.They prefer self-growth and will resist shrinkage at all costs, the genie that never goes willingly back into its bottle. They are The Little Shop of Horrors, every one of them, at their core - Feed me, Seymour. They will eat you. They will enslave you.
Yeah, yeah: "Meeza hatesa gubmint." We know.They will seek to trade places with you, seeing you put into their tiny, powerless bottle. For your safety and well being, naturally.
That's the history of most states, including ours.
I have explained why it does not. Rights are just as real and natural and necessary whether there is any Creator or not, because societies where people have rights out-compete societies where they don't.In what I have read, there seem to me to be an omission that is fundamental to a free society. Doesn't the Natural Law that endows us all with the very rights at the heart of this discussion, imply a Creator granted us such rights?
As already proved, there is no natural law that endows anyone, or ever has or ever could endow anyone, with property in land, because that would inherently violate others' rights to life and liberty.If, accepting this as the basis for Natural Law, the law that endows all with their life, liberty and property, is the foundation for a free society.
Assuming that it is a tax on actual valid property (i.e., products of labor) and not on government-issued and -enforced privileges such as land titles. Right.Anything that violates this is a violation of that most basic of all truths. If we accept this, then it seems clear to me any form of property taxation is a violation.
True; and if land is privately owned, you are not free. Period. The landowner has removed a portion of your right to liberty. If enough land is privately owned, you are effectively enslaved, as proved by the slave-like condition of the landless in all countries where private landowning is well established, but government does not intercede on behalf of the landless through welfare, public health care and education, union monopolies, minimum wages, etc.This discussion about how much violation is acceptable in what would then be an almost free society seems irrelevant as there is no such thing, either you are free or you are not.
Recognizing that land cannot possibly be his property, any more than the earth's atmosphere or the sea could be.It seems to me the basis of concern stems from this: that a truly free society then means that naturally a man is indeed with in his Rights to deny others the use of or any portion of that which is his, whether it is his property, or his labor.
What constitutes valid ownership is absolutely fundamental.And this indeed means that there is the possibility that some shipwrecked penniless man would be at the utter disposal of the man who owns that on which the other is shipwrecked.(I'll omit the debate on what constitutes ownership out, as I don't believe it has bearing either way on my point)
True: privileges like landowning turn basically good men into evil, ravening monsters who gleefully rob, torture, starve, enslave and murder their fellows.It may be naturally within man to hoard what is his. And it seems to me that much of the discussion here assumes that man is basically evil. I disagree. I think Men are basically good.
It has been addressed. See above for a brief treatment of the issue.This is the natural law that isn't addressed.
I doubt that. IME most who support socialism desire unearned wealth or power.Most people who support socialism, support it out of the desire to do good.
It is true that all evil must be rationalized and justified; and institutionalized evil, evil inflicted as a matter of public policy, requires an extraordinary amount of it.People want to help their fellow man. Free people want to promote freedom, thus the cycle of freedom and despotism ensues. Man cares about other men so much, that he becomes tyrannical in making everyone "free". Those wholly evil know this basic law of nature and use it to their advantage. How does any massive societal change ever occur if not under the guise of doing good?
If you think there can be a "freedom" to remove others' rights by such means as slavery or landowning, then yes.Is it the concern that people will suffer, if everyone is indeed allowed to exercise complete freedom?
No. Rather, to stop them doing evil, we must stop them from violating the rights of other men without making just compensation.To somehow ensure that all men do good, must we violate the rights of all men?
States can be anthropomorphized because they are the products of men and their wants, needs and desires.
No, such claims are absurd. A building is also a product of men's wants, needs and desires, but it is nonsensical to anthropomorphize it.
That betrays a fundamental misconception of what states are. Trust is not a concept that applies to them.States are not to be trusted, period.
IME most who support socialism desire unearned wealth or power.
It was a little more complex than that. I think that there are a variety of factors which make a claim more or less likely to be valid, and undertaking transformation of the claimed resource is one of the biggest ones, probably the biggest. The size of the claim, the nature of the resource, the location of the resource, what kind of transformation you're doing, how far along the transformation is, and on and on, all play into its justice. It would be very difficult to establish a just claim without having done any labor whatsoever. In fact, I can't think of a case where that would be possible.
How did this discussion get to 154 pages? Property taxes are inherently odious. What a man earns the government has no right to take away.
Mostly through repetition of fallacious, absurd and dishonest objections to LVT, and their refutations.How did this discussion get to 154 pages?
No, that's objectively false, as proved by the fact that the US states with the highest property tax rates, like NH, NJ, TX, WI, etc. tend to have better economies, higher incomes, less welfare, unemployment and crime, better education and public services, more affordable housing, etc. than the average, while the states with the lowest property tax rates, like LA, AL, MS, CA, etc. tend to have worse economies, lower incomes, more welfare, unemployment and crime, worse education and public services, less affordable housing, etc. than the average. The catastrophic effect of lower property tax rates since Proposition 13 passed in CA in 1978 is blatantly obvious and indisputable.Property taxes are inherently odious.
True. But as labor earns its product, and land is not a product of labor, it is logically impossible for any man ever to have earned land.What a man earns the government has no right to take away.
Right, he did! Labored hard to get it, that is. Change your word "on" to "for". He had to earn a lot of wealth to be able to trade for all that land.Ted Turner owns 1,910,000 acres. He must have labored REALLY hard on all that land. ;-)