▲ | _petronius 6 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
If you lived in Ireland in that period, you benefitted from Irish government services, schools, police, fire services, etc. You participated in the community (hopefully), used roads, bought things in shops, so and on so forth. Regardless, the idea that the government can only tax you if it directly gave you sufficient benefit, _in your assessment_, is of course nonsense. Taxes are what you owe to the society you live in, not about what society owes to you. If you are lucky enough to be internationally mobile, this does not exempt you from contributing to the communities you spend time in as you travel around the world. You cannot expect to arrive in a country, earn money from it, and depart again without paying your fair share of taxes. If you do not like how a country has structured its tax law and what priorities it has as a society, you are of course always free to not move there in the first place. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | robocat 6 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> benefitted from Irish government services, schools, police, fire services, etc. You participated in the community (hopefully), used roads That is a terrible basis for argument: we mostly each get similar usage of services (roads, police, yadda yadda) which should be an argument for a fixed amount of tax per person (a poll tax). If you wish to argue that we get what we pay for: then rich people pay wayyyyyy more so they should get more government services??? The wealthy surely don't get better policing: instead the wealthy pay heaps for their own insurance and security systems. Be careful making any argument based on services received for money spent because the well off pay a lot and don't receive a lot for it. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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