ldrews, on 2017-March-01, 18:13, said:
Well, we do disagree. By your logic a wealthy person should not complain if a mugger robs him. After all, it just another example of someone using force or coercion to confiscate his property, of which he has a disproportionate share. The sin of envy can be used to justify all sorts of immoral actions.
May I suggest taking a remedial course in logical thinking? A wealthy person didn't become wealthy as a side-effect of the existence of muggers, nor do the efforts of the muggers in society bestow any benefit upon the wealthy.
The main difference between us may be philosophical. I see nothing innately superior in someone born to rich parents than someone born to middle class or poor. I see no intrinsic moral entitlement in the one not present in the others. I do not think anyone to be better than anyone else merely based on the wealth of their parents.
I see no reason why those who get the most out of living in an affluent society ought not to pay more than do the poor, who, after all, don't actually experience the affluent part of 'affluent society' despite, in many cases, working far, far harder than the wealthy.
Indeed, with the ever-growing degree of economic inequality, in my view the wealthy have an ever-increasing moral obligation to the society that affords them the chance to live their lives of luxury.
Make no mistake about it: very few, if any, rich people could enjoy a comfortable life if deprived of the benefits afforded by living in a wealthy country. Even if they were to move, say, to a third world country, to live luxuriously, safely and healthily, they'd need to import much of what a NA society affords them.
Imagine being a billionaire 200 years ago. Richest person in the world. But, no refrigeration, no access to fresh out-of-season foods local to one's location, no telephone, no mass media, no internet, no radio, no health care that we'd recognize (the phrase 'catch your death of cold' meant something back then, literally), and so on. Being rich is meaningless in a vacuum. It is meaningful only within a society able, at a price, to sell one the luxuries one so craves. Well, being in a society, to any moral or civilized human, comes with obligations as well as rights.
Libertarians (and you sound as if you might be one of those) never seem to understand this. It's weird to me to converse with someone so selfish and unaware.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari