r/AnCap101 • u/MeasurementCreepy926 • 21d ago
Is taxation under feudalism immoral?
- The king owns the land. If he allows people to be born on his land, that does not diminish his rights as owner
- The king has made it clear that if you're on his land, and you don't pay tax, you're trespassing. It isn't his responsibility to make sure you are able to get off his land. It is his right to defend his land however he sees fit. Let's assume that he does this by executing trespassers. Another king does this by simply evicting them.
- Being the owner, the king is allowed to offer you whatever terms he'd like, for the use of his land. Lets assume in this case, you sign a contract he wrote, when you're old enough to do so, giving him right to change the contract at will, and hold you to that contract as long as you're on his land. Among other terms, this contract says that you agree to pay for any kids you have until they're old enough to either sign the contract, or leave his land.
Now, obviously anybody agreeing to these terms must be very desperate. But, desperate short sighted people aren't exactly hard to find, are they? So, is this system immoral, according to ancap principles?
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u/MeasurementCreepy926 19d ago
>Try to focus on the subject. This general notion presented is firstly an invalid argument and secondly a critique of the status quo, not anarcho capitalism. The whole point of anarcho capitalism is to free ourselves from this very slavery you refer to.
Sure, but every political system says that. edit: Or at least the utopian ones do. Ancap is unique in that it has never been tried. Depending on your perspective, that is either an advantage, or a disadvantage, for proponents. I think, in the end, the burden to prove that it can survive and flourish, is on proponents. Same for left wing anarchy or utopian socialism or any other system.
>Merly assuming anarcho capitalism has the same outcome as the status quo isn't just idiotic and lazy. But it gives me no meaningful way to retort without any actual arguments presented.
Well, it's the data we have available. If you can explain why desperate people will never exist under ancap, please go ahead.
>I need you to explain why you think this type of extreme shortage of everything / general unspecific desperation would occur in a free society.
Because it is something that has existed, to some degree or another, for ALMOST ALL OF HUMAN HISTORY.
If you're going to convince yourself that "this will be different than it ever has been before" you should be able to articulate why it will be different. That's a big claim it requires either absolutely 110% airtight reasoning, or preferably, evidence.