Our society was built on the notion that we will have a certain tax levy placed upon each citizen, but that it will be fair, balanced and self sustaining in nature.
"Pack93z" wrote:
Actually, it wasn't.
That required a constitutional amendment ... in 1913.
Prior to that, the taxation of citizens in the modern way of income taxation was primarily for "emergencies" only (e.g, the Civil War).
The more usual manners of taxation were (i) taxation on property ownership, and (ii) taxation on foreigners (a/k/a tariffs). The first, IIRC, was in the USA originally a Hamilton idea, and one much opposed until compulsory education got pushed through and had to somehow be paid for.
The latter? Well, the idea is still alive and well, alas. It's a primary tenet of mercantilism, which has a long and ignoble and wrongheaded history far worse than communism and socialism combined.
Taxes of all sorts (lets not forget the sales tax, which was the invention of some corrupt Roman caesar-type) are, of course, as old as human society.
But among the ideas that set the Great American Experiment apart was a radical notion about taxation. A notion that, yes, was made most vociferously and physically by the original Tea Partiers. The notion that taxation was not a duty of citizens; that it was an imposition on citizens that had to be first justified by those seeking to impose it.
A notion that, IMO, had a dagger put through its heart in 1913.
Unfortunately.
Now some (e.g., most of the 535 clowns in DC and your favorite state and local legislatures, "liberal" and "conservative" alike) will argue that 1913 was an improvement.
With all due respect, however, they're wrong.
I have no "duty" to pay taxes. I only do so because I'm a wimp. Because I'd rather not deal with the consequences of failing to do so.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)