Taxation is theft. If a street gang said, "Give us 30% of your income and we'll protect you from the other gangs," that's a crime. But when the government does the exact same thing, it's regarded as legitimate. — fishfry
I think you are being unnecessarily formalistic in dealing with this question. — T Clark
You say - "But I didn't choose to live in your society." I say "Tough titties." There used to be a solution - head off to unexplored areas and live off your own efforts with no help from others. That's not possible anymore. If you live in our society and use our infrastructure - roads, distribution networks, telephones, legal protections (including property ownership), etc., pay your damn taxes and stop complaining. — T Clark
The police would take it away from you, if you took it from someone else but how would they know if you stole it from someone if that person is dead? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I cannot agree with that at all. Regardless of how YOU obtain a stereo, it does not in any way give permission to another person to steal anything from anyone, including YOU and your stereo. If I were looking to buy a stereo and you were selling one, the onus is on you as to any kind of 'Karmic' settlement for good or evil, not me, the unknowing obtainer of your stereo. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I think your purpose is to be an existentialist. It's the freedom, potential and coming-to-be that count. Actually being makes an object of you and pins you down. Essence is an illusion. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/existentialism/ — Cuthbert
Sorry, but that's just defeatist bullshit. You might not have a grand purpose - you might not be designing a space probe or curing cancer. But even ordinary purposes are worthwhile. I think you're just looking for excuses. — Wayfarer
I agree with getting rid of Protestant work ethic. But my definition of work is really much broader than just survival related activities.. it is regulating comfort and seeking entertainment. It is about the maintenance of one's life. I don't think creating people who have to maintain their lives, including survival but not only survival-related activity, is not a good thing. Nothing wrong with no one existing. I don't believe in creating a problem for someone (of maintaining life) is a desirable thing. — schopenhauer1
Perhaps, the main reason is that to apply the golden rule, the person has to be already in some sense 'enlightened' or capable of self-love. After all, self-love is prior to treating another with kindness and empathy. — Posty McPostface
There is no escaping making others work really (unless the hermit scenario) if we are to live as humans usually do (in a society, that is). — schopenhauer1
However, not having new humans eliminates this dilemma of being forced into working for others demands (and vice versa). Thus antinatalism prevents people from having to work. No need for need if there is no one to need. — schopenhauer1