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<blockquote data-quote="98cwitr" data-source="post: 75579033" data-attributes="member: 146610"><p>It's most certainly happening because my church is directly involved in it. At a macro-national level, we generate billions in private charity donations each year. Just look at gofundme.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Sure. Tariffs are a great revenue generator. Federally, we collected $56B in tariff capital last year. There are plenty of people surviving without a car. Lottery funds are simply a subsidy, there are other revenue streams to tap.</p><p></p><p>What I would really like to see, and what the shutdowns exposed me to, is those with the means of doing so should pull their children from public schools and put them in community schools; where 7-10 parents get together and hire a teacher, but not all this ivy-league private school overhead. The cost would be something between $250-$400/mo and also afford the teacher not only their salary, but health insurance as well. </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Handing people money every month, without building a relationship with them, is simply called "enabling."</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Sure! I'm not opposed to taxation, I'm just saying that compulsory taxation of labor is unjust; it's...dare I say...akin to state-owned slavery: If I own your labor, then I own you.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="98cwitr, post: 75579033, member: 146610"] It's most certainly happening because my church is directly involved in it. At a macro-national level, we generate billions in private charity donations each year. Just look at gofundme. Sure. Tariffs are a great revenue generator. Federally, we collected $56B in tariff capital last year. There are plenty of people surviving without a car. Lottery funds are simply a subsidy, there are other revenue streams to tap. What I would really like to see, and what the shutdowns exposed me to, is those with the means of doing so should pull their children from public schools and put them in community schools; where 7-10 parents get together and hire a teacher, but not all this ivy-league private school overhead. The cost would be something between $250-$400/mo and also afford the teacher not only their salary, but health insurance as well. Handing people money every month, without building a relationship with them, is simply called "enabling." Sure! I'm not opposed to taxation, I'm just saying that compulsory taxation of labor is unjust; it's...dare I say...akin to state-owned slavery: If I own your labor, then I own you. [/QUOTE]
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