Bubblez said:
_mpaul said:
Bubblez said:
Helicopter Ben said:
Bubblez said:
Helicopter Ben said:
Bubblez said:
Would you pay your property tax bill if you could choose to simply opt out by paying whatever you amount you desired or nothing at all?
Property tax is an oxymoron, so no I would not pay them. I don't agree with government schools so I consider that theft. Just like the vast majority of what the government wastes our hard earned money on, I would not pay my income taxes either. All of that money would have been far better utilized if left in the hands of those who earned it.
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Take a look how the big players in the free market fought tooth and nail so they can continue to pump lead into the atmosphere through the use of leaded gasoline decrying the costs involved. This goes to just about every environmental regulation that prevents a business from dumping whatever they want into the environment. Our air is much cleaner today because of this. None of this would have happened without the government forcing the hands of business to do it while time and time again business showed the only thing they care about is their bottom line, lead exposure be damned.
Once again, you are asking us to prove a negative. You have no proof the government did this better than the free market. OTOH we have countless examples of destructive government actions.
So I'll ask again. If people are so untrustworthy to do good that we need government to force them…how do you reconcile that with the fact that government is run by FAR LESS trustworthy people?
We know the free market fought all of these things, as they sure has heck had no plan of action to fix them.
I have a response to this, but you keep avoiding the FAR more important question…. So I'll ask again. If people are so untrustworthy to do good that we need government to force them…how do you reconcile that with the fact that government is run by FAR LESS trustworthy people?
That is not a fact at all. The issues with government are the incessant lobbying by private industry that do all they can to kill off any attempts to employ vital regulation. Eventually the tide ultimately turns. The facts haven't changed, the ability for private industry to dictate policy has. Even at that point, whether its Big Tobacco, or Big Oil in conjunction with other industry players, they all still fight against those regulations.
Its certainly not big business finally having an epiphany deciding to clean up their own acts. They are still forced to do so.
So it's not a fact, but the issue is elected officials allowing themselves to be swayed from what they might otherwise think is best for the country by lobbyists?
They are an arm of big business at that point, so you have big business fending off vital regulation because it'll cost them a few dollars.
To say that same big business would suddenly come to a realization that pumping lead into the atmosphere is bad on their own, despite fighting regulation attempts for decades is laughable.
As Cecil notes, you're changing the argument. We've somehow gone from the discussion of a federal regulation about the costs a small or medium business owner must incur, by force of the federal government, to accommodate people with disabilities, and the wisdom of the federal government getting involved in that relationship, to pumping lead into the atmosphere?
But that is the fundamental question, isn't it? Knowing what we about how the federal government, and that it couldn't find its way out of a wet paper bag if it had to--at least not without a couple of studies, committee meetings, Congressional side deals, and hiring an overprice government contractor--when is it a good idea to control by force how two private parties interact with each other?