-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Wed, Oct 25, 2000 at 10:09:53AM -0400, Declan McCullagh wrote:
It's a not entirely uninteresting approach, but one doesn't have to resort to libertarian rights-theory to refute it (not that arguing about rights is going to resolve anything anyway).
Simple pragmatism can do the same. I mean, Nathan, have you ever considered what happens when taxes are raised to 95 percent?
I guess it depends on the country. In the U.S., I'm not sure what would happen.
I know you were just speaking hypothetically, but to be realistic, a hypo will have to includse the negative effects as well as the positive.
You are correct. Just so it's clear, I did say "IF raising taxes to 95%..." I'm not sure that it would.
For instance, what are the economic effects?
Again, it depends on the economic framework under which we are operating.
What are the black markets that arise?
I don't know, what black markets would arise? If people were housed, clothed, fed, etc, then most would still have plenty of disposable income to buy what they wanted.
What punitive measures must nations adopt to enforce tax collection?
I'm not sure. However, if all housing and food was provided by the government, and not paying your appropriate level of taxes removed your entitlement to said housing and food, then I'd think most people would pay their taxes. Not that I'm advocating government being the sole distributor of food or anything. I'm just illustrating that it depends on the exact situation.
What about revolt and the ensuing bloodshed?
Who would revolt? The rich? Too few in numbers. The middle class? They're apathetic, and they'd still get access to everything they had under our system in the new system. The poor? They'd be better off, so they wouldn't revolt. Cypherpunks? Sorry, guys, but there aren't that many of you. ;-)
What about public choice theory?
I'm not familiar with this. Want to explain it to me? Probably not, seeing as both you and T.C. seem to think that I'm not worth speaking to. Ah, well.
Think these things through, if you really want to be "pragmatic."
-Declan
On Tue, Oct 24, 2000 at 11:58:18PM -0700, Nathan Saper wrote:
least pain." I guess this is basically pragmatism. For example, if raising taxes to 95% would feed everyone in the world (I'm just speaking hypothetically), then I would advocate
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