Many cultures of people across the face of the Earth have
rules which generally apply to the keeping of a civilized society. In
Christianity there is the Eighth Commandment, “Thou shalt not steal.” If you
are a Scientologist you have in the thirteenth Way to Happiness, “Do not Steal.”
One of the disciplines of Hinduism is, “No desire to possess or steal.”
While there are many other religions that have
incorporated within them this idea that it is wrongful to steal the possessions
or money of other people it is not just a religious concept. Almost every
country, state, province, municipality, or any other division of government
with a functional legal system across the face of the Earth has very thoroughly
incorporated within it laws designed toward the prevention of theft.
It is a logical underlying principle of all laws, secular
or non-secular, that in order to be enforced the terms of the laws must be
defined and understandable by those who are expected to follow or enforce them. I
could at this time write some fifty or sixty thousand words of examples of this
directly taken from many various legal codes throughout the world but that
would be unnecessarily pointless and complicated. So in my own typical writing
style I will create an example of what I’m talking about that everybody can
understand. That way in a layman’s philosophical terms we will all know what we
are talking about.
Let’s say I need some money and I know you have some. In
knowing you have some money I decide to walk up to you and politely ask you for
it. In your kindness and generosity you ask me what my need for it is and upon
agreeing with my need you give your money to me. Is this theft? No. Of course
not.
Okay, now let us assume you again have money and in the keenness
of your perception you see my need without asking and again with your kindness
and generosity you just decide to walk up and give it to me. Is this theft?
Again, no. Of course not.
Now let’s suppose I need money and I know you have some.
I, in my need, walk up to you, punch you in the face, knock you down, kick you
and take your money. Is this theft? Yes. Of course it is.
Again let us suppose I need money and I know you have
some. I, in my need, walk up to you, and simply threaten to knock you down,
kick you, and take your money. And you believe I could accomplish the task, so
rather than having me beat on you, you give me the money. Is this theft? Yes.
Of course it is.
And just one more time, let’s suppose I, in my need for
your money, get a bunch of people to surround you, threaten you somehow, and
take your money, instead of just doing it myself? It this theft? Yes.
Obviously.
So from these five examples we can derive for ourselves,
for the sake of discussion in the philosophic sense, what theft actually is.
Theft, simply put, is the transfer of money or property from a donor to a
recipient, under force or threat of force, against the will of the donor. That
last part is bold in italics because it is the most important part of the
sentence. In determining theft it is the will of the donor of the property or
money that decides the issue. You cannot steal something which is willingly
given. And you cannot call something charity that is taken against the will of
the donor.
Just for the fun of it let’s see if there is a way around
this “will of the donor” thing where we could possibly fool ourselves into
believing we aren’t just taking someone else’s money.
Let us suppose I need money and I know you have some. I,
in my need, walk up to you, abduct you, and lock you in a small room until you
decide to give me the money I want. Does this get me around the idea that I’m
taking your money against the will of the donor? Nope.
How about in the same scenario as the latest above I
simply threaten to abduct you and hold you in a small room until you, in the
belief I could do it, give me the money I want. Nope. It’s still theft.
Hmmm … What if I am not taking the money for myself? What
if I need the money for someone else? What if my father has been sick and I
need the money to pay for his medical bills, so I come over to your house with
my gun and threaten you until you give me the money. Certainly because
compassion for the needs of my father is involved, you would not consider it
theft. But nope. It still is, by definition above, theft.
Well what if I, before going over to your house to
threaten you and take your money to pay for my father’s medical bills, go
around to every neighbor on the block, explain the situation and take a vote as
to whether I should go to your house and take your money? You vote no and
everybody else votes yes. I show up at your door, threaten you with my gun and
take your money. Am I still taking money from the donor against his will? Yep.
Is it still theft? Yep.
Okay, maybe that’s too direct. What if I do all of those
things in the last paragraph but instead of me showing up at your door to
threaten you and take your money I hire someone else to do it for me? That
person can just take what I owe him for the task—seeing how I have no
money—directly from the money he takes from you and give the rest to me so I
can pay my father’s medical bills. Would I still be taking money from the donor
against his will? Yes. Is it still theft? Ummm … yep. It is.
Maybe that’s still too direct. What if I get together
with the rest of the neighborhood and elect someone to hire someone else to go
to your house with a gun and threaten you and take your money and give it to me
to pay Dad’s medical bills? Am I still taking money from you against your will?
Yep.
Well then, how about if, instead of sending someone to
your house with a gun the first time, we first send someone without a gun to
threaten you with abduction until you pay? And then, should you be unwilling to
cough up the cash, we send the second person with a gun to lock you in a small
room until you change your mind about the situation? Is that still taking money
against the will of the donor? Yep.
What if I do all of the above paragraph but instead, send
you a threatening letter saying how you should give me your money, then send
the first guy, then the second? Or better yet, I could send you a letter that
if you don’t sign it admitting you owe me the money, I will send the first guy
without a gun, then the second guy with the gun, then put you in a little room
until you give me the money you owe me? That way when you accuse me of stealing
money from you I would be able to present the court with a piece of paper that
says you owed me the money. Is that still taking money from an unwilling donor?
What if we elect a bunch of people to decide your money
should be taken from you to pay for my father’s medical bills, and those
elected people hire someone else to send you letters, threaten you without guns
first, then if you are unwilling to pay they hire someone with a gun to
threaten you, and still unwilling to pay they slap you in restraints and haul
you off to a small room until you decide to change your mind about the
situation? Is that still taking money by force from an unwilling donor? Yep. It
is.
So what if I say that instead of using the money to pay
for only my father’s medical bills it is to pay for everybody else’s medical
bills, plus ten thousand other things you may or may not approve of, too? We then elect a bunch of people to decide
your money should be taken from you to pay for everybody’s medical bills, and those
elected people hire someone else to threaten you without guns first, then if
you are unwilling to pay they hire someone with a gun to threaten you, and
still unwilling to pay they slap you in restraints and haul you off to a small
room until you decide to change your mind about the situation? Is that still
taking money by force from an unwilling donor? Yep. It is.
Now what if we take this entire assembly of elected
people and the people they hire to threaten you, take your money, and potentially
incarcerate you, all against the will of the donor and call them a government?
And what if we infuse into the population the idea that the people are all one
and any one is all? And what if we fill their heads with the rather arrogant
thought that they, as one person in concert with a simple majority of other
people, and against the will of the minority of people in opposition, can
somehow speak with authority about what other people should be forced to do
with their money? For example: “I think we should spend money on people’s
medical bills,” in spite of the fact that it, strictly speaking, is not money
you’ve earned for yourself, and have that concept legally binding on unwilling
donors forced with threatened incarceration to give up their well earned funds.
Is this still taking money from people against the will of the donor?
Well what if while doing all of that we say that those
people who have a lot of money have no real right to it anyway? What if without any
evidence whatsoever, we simply accuse them of stealing it from someone else and
have the government take it from them to pay for everybody else’s medical
bills? What if we accuse them of being greedy? What if we say they have the
responsibility to pay for the needs and arbitrary desires of everybody else,
for the good and “General Welfare” (which can mean anything to anybody) of everybody else? What if for no reason
whatsoever, based on a purely arbitrary standard, we say it isn’t fair that
they have so much and we so little? Are we still taking money by force from
unwilling donors? More than that though, at that point aren’t we also saying
that there are no individual rights to property or money?
What if we say the poor are weak and the rich are strong
so the poor have every right to fulfill their needs by taking money from the
rich? Yes, again we are using the threat of force to take money from unwilling
donors. But more than that there is the fallacious idea that the poor are
somehow weak; while as a majority of people somehow still possess enough power
to take what they want from the rich.
Socialism is the consideration that large groups of
people have the right to take what they want from small groups of people. Theft
is the taking of money from one person for the use of other people against the
will of the donor. It does not matter who justifies it or how it is justified.
It is still the idea that it is somehow a right of yours to take what was
earned by, and belongs to, someone else. It is also the idea that somehow your majority
rights matter and the rights of the minority of donors don’t.
In spite of whatever illusion you throw up in front of
yourself to justify it and appease your guilty conscience, by taking money from
unwilling donors, whether it be for someone’s healthcare or PBS, you are
participating in a culture that will sooner or later experience the uncivilized
attitude that the rights of individuals and minorities don’t matter when the interests
of the masses are concerned.
Your consent to pay more taxes is just as irrelevant to the people who take the money as the lack of consent on the part of the people who voted against them. They're gonna take the money whether you want them to or not.
And in that light I would also ask you if it is truly a
civilized society when that society can justify, directly or otherwise, the
threat of the use of guns and incarceration to say that you must share your wealth?
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