BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:mrswdk wrote:Granted, people don't choose to be born into their country's social system. However, by staying there and consuming its services (while paying the taxes required to consume said services) we can assume that they have accepted the social contract of 'government service in return for contribution to the state'. thegreekdog probably has better insight into this than me - given he's a lawyer - but my understanding is that, legally speaking, you can be considered to have implicitly accepted a contract even without signing a physical document. No one is forcing you to remain within Am*rican society; you are choosing to.
Right, that's the myth of the Social Contract. It just doesn't exist; otherwise, I can reinvent more myths as to why you owe me and my friends money and why it's okay for us to forcibly take it. It also justifies any form of government (from terrorists to mafia), so it's not logically sound, or if applied to only a certain democracy with certain characteristics, then it becomes increasingly arbitrary (and can still render any depraved act of a democratic government as voluntary).
The social contract is a useful description precisely because people agree to it. Through their actions, not through their words. Every time they accept services from the government, and give money to the government in return, they are agreeing to the importance of this government. It's a useful metaphor because very few people actually would prefer the no-government state to the situation with the government, even if it means freedoms are infringed upon. Can any of you say with a straight face that you would prefer to have complete anarchy?
I've already addressed how this agreement is coerced. I don't deny that most people agree to it, but it doesn't follow that they voluntarily agree. When the Mafia Don asks to see you, you definitely agree to it; otherwise, you'd get hurt.
The legitimacy of the social contract as a valid description does not require voluntary exchange, so your comments are irrelevant. What you're missing here is that even though when the tax man comes along it is a form of involuntary exchange, it's only involuntary if you do not agree to the legitimacy of the government. If you did agree that there is a legitimate authority for that government to collect taxes, then calling it an involuntary exchange is absurd because you clearly agreed to the exchange (at least implicitly). That is to say, if you think the government is legally allowed to collect taxes, and that you consent to the legal structure of the government, then you simply cannot describe taxation as involuntary exchange in the way you mean it.
The mafia analogy only applies if you don't already agree that the US has a legitimate authority to collect taxes from you, but then you don't agree to the social contract anyway, and you are essentially legally enslaved.