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Rilla, you're not saying anything incorrect, but the conclusions you draw do not follow.
 Originally Posted by a500lbgorilla
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So, when someone who can take everything from you, including your life, asks for a %cut of your earnings, who really has the best claim to what you believe you possess?
This applies to the government, just like you intend it to. But it also applies to independent thieves. Therefore, this cannot be used to distinguish governmental taking from independent taking. This is what has compelled some people to apply the logic across the board, which is that either government taxation steals or independent thieves don't steal. The latter is unconscionable in our culture, so we make the argument that taxation is necessarily theft.
You're fortunate to live in America where the armed forces are given to the people, but don't forget that violence is always the bottom line in this natural world.
There were societies which didn't even pretend their people had any agency outside of the will of the Most Violent, and as time has gone on, through war, revolt, and revolution, we've found a good mix of violent power and independent will, but you've always got to remember the basic problem being addressed - violence is the ultimate decisive method.
This is also correct, but the conclusions you draw do not follow. There is nothing unique in the world that means a violence monopoly market is sustainable yet violence monopolistic competitive markets are not. Note that "monopolistic competitive" is the technical term for what most companies operate in; think: Apple, Caterpillar, Costco, Los Pollos Hermanos, Joe The Plumber's Plumb Plum Plumbing, etc..
You're taking on faith the idea that there can be no choice but for violence to be so monopolized that it results in compulsory revenues. Yet the fact that these government monopolies are also democratized means that they aren't actually total monopolies. Their compulsory revenues make them extremely monopolistic, yet their democratization is an extreme opposite of monopolies. They're strange bedfellows; a wacky bastardization of an antipodal merger.
It makes sense that things would be more functional and easier to just have monopolistic competitive violence markets instead of these bastardized entities of opposing elements. Regardless, directly to your point, the types of entities that governments are strongly suggests that the proposition that there must always be violence total monopolies is not correct.
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