Spideynw wrote:Famspear wrote:Spideynw wrote:Whose rights do I violate by not paying taxes?
I'm not sure why you're asking that question, but here's my answer.
With respect to federal income taxes, you're not violating anyone else's "rights" in a strict legal sense by not paying taxes.
Then I don't see how I can be punished. Why would anyone ever complain if no one's rights have been violated?
Because under our legal and political system, there is no
legal requirement that someone else's "rights" be violated
in a strict legal sense in order for society to make a given behavior a criminal offense. You may feel in some deep philosophical way that there should be such a rule, but there isn't.
Isn't a statue [sic] a rule made by some strangers I don't know claiming to have a right to rule over me? So are you saying I am violating the rights of the people doing business as government?
Yes, a statute is a rule made by some strangers you don't know. In the case of federal tax statutes, if you don't know the members of Congress, then they're people who DO INDEED have a "right" (in the broad, inartful sense in which you are using that term) to "rule over you," as you put it.
No, I am not saying that by violating federal tax laws, you would be "violating the rights of people doing business as government." With all due respect, that's an inartful expression. I would say that when you're violating federal tax laws, you're violating laws enacted by our duly elected representatives. Whether you agree with the laws on some philosophical level doesn't change the legal reality of what you're doing.
I don't think I should be punished when no one's rights have been violated.
So, write to your congressman/congresswoman.
And law is philosophy. So I guess you don't like to talk about law. As such, I don't know why you are posting.
I love to talk about law. I have a doctorate in the philosophy of law. The term
JURIS DOCTOR (in Latin) or "Doctor of Jurisprudence" (in English) means, roughly, "teacher of the philosophy of law."
However, I have no interest in talking about absolutely everything about the philosophy of law. I'm not interested in the philosophy of environmental law, for example, or patent law. I'm not even interested in some the aspects of the philosophy of tax law. Like most people, I like to think about some stuff, and I find other things boring.
Would you like to talk about the significance of the dates October 16, 2005 and October 17, 2005 as they relate to the duty of a corporate debtor in a chapter 7 bankruptcy case to file state income tax returns? Would you like to discuss the legal philosophy over whether there should be a different rule, depending on something that has to do with those two dates?
Why should you be interested in that question? The answer is: There is no particular reason why you should.
I'm just like you. I like to talk and think about some things, but not other things.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet