Re: Is being homeless a crime / should it be?
Posted: August 24th, 2021, 7:09 pm
Ecurb wrote: ↑August 24th, 2021, 5:03 pmThat is false. Walmart and every other business pays huge local tax bills, which pay for roads (That is why many local jurisdictions offer incentives for such businesses to locate in their communities). The annual local taxes are also a factor determining the value of the property and thus the price a purchaser pays for it.
The Waltons (who own WalMart) amassed their massive wealth by locating their stores on cheap properties on the outskrits of towns. The infrastructure provided by the state was the hidden cost of their venture, for which they did not pay. Without support for the auto industry and massive spending on public roads, WalMart could not have existed. The same is true for most large companies. Could Ford motors exist without government spending on roads?
And, of course, with respect to auto companies you have it exactly backwards --- the cars came first, the roads later. The Ford Motor company's products drove the growth of the Good Roads movement in the 1920s. The demand arose from users of Ford's products, not from the company.
Aren't all of our computer companies beholden to NASA?That is absurd. NASA played virtually no role in the development of computers. Nor did any other government entity. The microprocessor (the CPU in personal computers) evolved from an early integrated circuit chip developed by Intel, under contract with a Japanese manufacturer of transistor radios, as a controller for a clock radio. The radio company ended up not buying the chip, so Intel put it on the market as Part #4004. Tinkerers discovered the chip, which was programmable and had 4 -bit registers, could be used as 4-bit computer CPU. Within a few months Intel released an 8-bit version, the Intel 8008. That was the world's first microprocessor.
The rich are inevitably the beneficiaries of government services, directly or indirectly, and they should pay more taxes than anyone else (and a higher percentage).Yes, they should pay in proportion to the benefit they receive from those services. But they have no duty to pay for services benefiting someone else.