Suddenly said:
Nope. I mean they benefit from govenment more in general. The benefits go beyond distribution of resources. Stark example, a homeless person and righ business owner. Who benefits more from the rule of law? The educational system's focus on occupational training? Security regulation?
Rule of law? Pretty nebulous concept, don't you think? The homeless guy isn't nearly as burdened by OSHA regulations or worker's comp regs or taxes or any number of government requirements placed upon the business owner. Therefore, the homeless guy "benefits" more by being burdened less.
Being protected by police? The homeless guy probably has closer association with the police on the beat because they are more visible to him on a daily basis. Their visibility probably prevents more assaults on him than they do on the business owner who lives 15 miles away in the suburbs. Thus, the homeless guy probably benefits more from police protection, at least to his personal safety, than does the businessman.
See what I mean? You can turn the benefits argument around entirely. I don't like it as a justification for inequitable tax treatment because it's just an academic justification. We could examine how all meat eaters benefit from USDA regulations concerning safe meating handling. Should vegetarians then pay less to account for their non-use? The quibbles could really get ridiculous.
I say better to choose another approach for trying to justify inequitable tax treatment, if you are going to take taxes inequitably at all.
Is the user fee thing supporting your argument or mine? Since my premise is that those that benefit most should pay more, so fine. Government defends and protects property rights, so those with more property...
Only some government services can be regarded as protecting property rights. Street sweeping, garbage pickup, and fire protection, for example, I'll grant you. What about eminent domain? For those adversely affected by it, it's hardly a protection of property rights.
Anyway, I suggested the user fee thing only as a distinction between road use and national defense, because in fact there already is a user fee of sorts in the way of gasoline taxes. I'm not necessarily advocating user fees for all governmental services. That's probably Shane, as far as I know.
As far as national defense goes, it isn't just about life or death. Who has more to lose when the evil British invade and sell us into slavery? Someone making $6 an hour at Wal-Mart or Bill Gates? Would a Wal-Mart employee notice much difference?
Property rights are only one consideration. Our country was founded to secure ideals and freedoms, not just to keep our stuff from the Brits. Slavery involves far more than abolition of property rights. The Wal-Mart guy loses just as much personal freedom to go to a Yankees game when he wants as Bill Gates does when he's sold as a slave.
Are you serious about that first sentence? Maybe available but hardly equal, and that is before we start looking into later job training when industries change and new skills are in demand.
Of course I'm serious. It's the whole premise of public education. All children are afforded the opportunity to be educated from K-12. No one said each school would be equal, and no one in his right mind would try to assert that such a thing is even remotely possible.
Or if you mean that only the children in school benefit from public education, I'd again disagree. Public schools are to a large extent subsidized occupational training. Heck, schools as job training was part of the stated rationale for _Brown v. Board_. A few years ago my local (at the time) school board reorganized its high school curriculum using what they called "a school to work" model. I was running one of the bigger buisnesses in my town, so I was invited to be on the "transition team" with mostly local representitives from large businesses with local ties. We were basically there to decide how the schools could better train students so they could step out and work for us. Some might call this "innovative practical education." I call it a very significant hidden subsidy and fooling the public into absorbing the cost of business. To some extent everyone benefits by public education, even though I'd like to see more education w/r/t critical thinking and less simple job training, but I benefit in some way nonetheless.
As to the second sentence, again I don't take a narrow view of benefits. I have no kids, nor am I likely to have kids. I benefit because more education equals more oppertunity which equals less chance of crack dealers next door.
Please see my response to Ziggurat above. I fully recognize and support the societal benefit derived from public education. That's not what we were talking about. You were asserting that property owners benefit more from public education than non-owners. That may or may not be true. What you cannot show is how a property owner without kids derives the same benefit from his property tax dollars as the property owner next door who has school age kids attending public school.
There is in fact a disparity there when one uses the benefits derived approach to justifying tax treatment.
Look, I fully recognize that this part of the discussion has gotten utterly academic and very far afield from practical solutions or realistic proposals. I'm not terribly fond of beating this into the ground, and I'll bet you aren't either.
AS