Tom Palven wrote:
You seem to equate "community" with nation-state.
No, I don’t. The state – it doesn’t matter whether it’s a nation-state or not – is an institution or structure – just one of many, many institutions and structures that the community establishes to serve various social ends.
Tom Palven wrote:
Individuals voluntarily co-operating with other individuals have presented mankind with mathematics, electric generators, radio, tv, airplanes, innovations in agriculture, the internet, and so on. Nation-states have provided such wonders as the Vietnam War, the Holocaust, Shock and Awe, Cash for Clunkers, Quantitative Easing, and so on.
On the other hand, individuals voluntarily co-operating with other individuals have given us the Nazi party, reality television, the Ku Klux Klan, the mafia, heroin and slavery. While states have given us sewage disposal, the eradication of smallpox, registration of land tenure, legal tender currency and the rule of law. You can cut this one both ways.
(And, if you think the internet was not developed by states, you need to read a bit more. ARPANET, milnet, CERN, the National Science Foundation, the National Physical Laboratory . . . it’s hard to find anyone involved in development of the internet who
wasn’t employed and paid by the state. You might also like to reflect a bit on the state that aviation technology would be in today if it hadn’t been for state patronage, support and money.)
Tom Palven wrote:
I don't think that "the community" is obliged to accept my view on this matter . . . .
So you’ve no objection to income tax, then? You’d rather you didn’t have to pay it but, ethically, the community is free to charge it regardless of your preferences?
Tom Palven wrote:
. . . nor am I, on the other hand, obliged to accept the politically correct view.
You’re not obliged to accept
any view, Tom. You are, however, obliged to pay income tax.