paying Taxes without money
Say someone wants to withdraw themselves from the civil economy of the United States (or any other country), how do they pay taxes, income (assuming you can define their subsistance such as hunting and gathering as income) taxes and property taxes. My point is how can someone pay taxes without money. The article does not address in what way or which medium is necesary to the payment of taxes to the state, and the posibilities of becomeing exempt. For instance what would you have to do to be perfectly exempt? Own nothing and live nowhere? In which case you would starve. You have to have land to grow food to feed your family but as long as you don't sell any of it, do you have to be taxed? If you have no money then how do you pay the taxes on your property? If you don't pay you get your land posesed, right? Then you starve. So you are basicaly forced into buisiness. Right? So this is an excelent example of how you do not really own the land. You rent it from the government and if you don't make the appropriet improvments, they will give it to someone who will.
Just asking?
- That property ownership is subject to certain conditions imposed by government does not mean that the owner is merely renting from the government. In the same way that one cannot walk down the street without subjecting himself to the powers of the police, one cannot own property unconditionally, at least not in an industrialized nation. And just as you wouldn't say that you are merely borrowing from the government your freedom to walk the street, neither is it correct to say that you are merely renting your property from the government.--Leftymn 00:10, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
Because the State has chosen, property tax, the condition that prevents the people from owning their homes the state is in fact demanding the logical equivalent of rent. It is also clear that if the government taxed our freedom like they do our property no one would be legally walking down the street unless they paid their freedom tax. 75.91.86.174 (talk) 13:56, 31 January 2009 (UTC)
Unless you believe the police are God you are no more subject to their power than you are to the wishes of your mother or the poisonous snake in the woods, before you can you walk down the street. Governments don't give people their freedom; God does, and at their very best governments can only assist in protecting it. A good government would guarantee the right of the people to acquire liberty. Our government, with property tax, is denying the people their right to acquire liberty, and stolen the ownership of their homes.
For society to evolve it must move in the direction of individual freedom and liberty. You would think that in a modern industrial society governments would have done away with the medieval practice of throwing people out of their homes if they are unable to pay the authorities. The fact that governments still practice this primitive, inhumane and immoral method of collecting revenue shows how incapable they are of evolving.
Tomas Real (talk) 13:41, 31 January 2009 (UTC)
You need food, water, and shelter to live. Not money. Now if someone wishes to withdraw from the civil economy and give up the use of money, how do they pay taxes? Do they have to? Is it legal to not participate in the economy of any country? --Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.57.36.67 (talk) 01:04, 14 October 2007 (UTC)
Are there any conditions under which one can become exempt from paying property tax? --Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.57.36.67 (talk) 01:12, 14 October 2007 (UTC)
Just replying-As for paying taxes without money, most places used to do this, but do not allow it anymore, which is why they invented money to begin with-they didn't like all the storage space used for storing the grain, cattle, etc. that that king/government took in as taxes. ...However, under US law, from my understanding, taxes are only payable on income if you earn more than a set amount and on barter, only if you gain in the dealings. If you gain nothing in your deal, then taxes are not due-generally.
There are a few places one can go to be relieved of property taxes, presumably, forever. Most of Alaska does not have property taxes, though all the major inhabited areas do. I haven't been able to find any other places without property tax, though. I understand some countries do not have any taxes at all, though I don't know which countries those are.
And, yes, it is perfectly legal to withdraw from the economy, though it may be unpleasant in most places. The process of how to do it is a different matter. I've been investigating this for some time and I am convinced that it can be done and I plan to do it in the near future.
Good luck to you.
Jacktheploughboy (talk) 07:07, 28 September 2008 (UTC)
Perhaps the greatest lie ever told is the American Dream of home ownership as property tax clearly prohibits ownership making it impossible to ever become free from debt. Property tax is the evolution of serfdom where kings and lords have been replaced by rulers of the State. This medieval extortion, collected on unrealized capital gains, makes the peoples homes into investments of the State. Property tax forces the people into government servitude in order to keep their homes. Clearly as in the past, modern day serfdom is intended to prevent the people from ever acquiring liberty. With property tax the people must pay with government currency. Gone are the good old days when you could pay with chickens, some other farm product or manual labor. Tomas Real (talk) 01:46, 23 January 2009 (UTC)
How Do I Pay My Property Taxes Video
Property Tax is Rent to the State
Under any system of property tax the "owner" is deemed to be the State and the entity in possession of the property merely the renter thereof.
PCE 01:44, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
A recent, anonymous, editor removed an external reference on the grounds that it was "an insipid article by a pro-tax individual". I haven't immediately restored it, because being insipid would be good grounds for removing it (and I don't know the literature well enough to tell whether that charge is true); it is also somewhat out of date (originally published 1972). But being pro-tax would not be grounds for removing it; we ought to have a balance of pro- and anti- references. So far as I can tell it was the only reference we had that discussed the distributional effect of property tax. Does anyone know a better reference for this issue - ideally a balanced and/or review paper? If not, then I think the deleted reference should go back. seglea 5 July 2005 23:15 (UTC)
Of course property tax is not "rent to the state", it is each property owners fair share of the funds/budget it takes to run local gov't and state services. --Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.91.124.41 (talk) 12:35, 1 July 2008 (UTC)
That the state retains ownership of everybody's property is an undeniable fact. That homesteaders are not homeowners and that they are just paying rent to the state is an undeniable fact. The owner is the one with the right to acquire possession of property when the renter fails to make payment. That the state has this right because of property tax is obvious.
If you had no idea it was the government demanding payment and not a landlord the only difference you would be able to discern from conventional rent would be the terms of your rental agreement. All the material facts that determine who is the owner and what is a renter remain the same. All arguments which try to prove that property tax is not the logical equivalent of rent are based on the justification of the tax and are irrational from the prospective of what is ownership and what is a renter.
If we are to believe that the state is not the owner charging homesteaders rent we would have to conclude that an owner is some one who has to make payment to someone else or lose possession of their property. This is absurd and a complete contradiction of what is ownership.
Our government needs to quit lying to the people and just come out and admit they are unwilling to let the people own their homes.
Written by Tomas Real --Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.31.120.24 (talk) 14:10, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
You can't tax ownership any more than you can make the earth flat by religious decree. What one does when they claim to tax ownership is make ownership into that which it is not. Redefining ownership from that which gives you freedom from debt to that which puts you in eternal debt is ludicrous. Every rational person in the world understands this and that our so called "authorities" are incapable of seeing this makes them into members of yet another "flat earth society". Taken from the book "If we free the slaves who will pick the cotton" written by Tomas Real. --Preceding unsigned comment added by Tomas Real (talk o contribs) 17:56, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
council tax
Any tax on the possession or ownership of property is a type of property tax.
Renters are owners of an interest in a piece of property. Their ownership is limited by time though.
UK council tax
Does Council Tax count as a property tax? It replaced the poll tax and you pay more the more your property is worth. Secretlondon 23:22, Nov 20, 2003 (UTC)
Interesting point. But I don't think it can be a property tax, because you pay it whether you own the property or not. It is really a kind of poll tax (but couldn't be called one for political reasons, of course). The fact that it charges you more for living in a bigger house can be seen as an attempt to be a progressive tax, on the assumption that size/value of house will be correlated with income. seglea 01:26, 21 Nov 2003 (UTC)
The tax is (a) per (private) property, not per person; (b) paid by the owner of the property if the property is unoccupied, although it's paid by the occupant if it is. I would argue that (a) here makes it a property tax rather than anything else; who pays it seems less relevant to me, and the payee still has an attachment to the property either way round.
UK business rates may also count as a property tax, but I'm not up on the details.
The UK's council tax system is ad valorem of a form. From memory - this needs verification and a reference - the UK bands houses by value into bands A-G, where the bands are delimited by the property value as assessed at a certain point in time (1980?) and compared against thresholds. Property improvement (il.e. new building) can affect the banding, I assume they go with notional value.
The rate of tax is modified, with discounts on single occupancy, occupancy entirely by unemployed people or students, no occupancy.
Thus it is a function of property value, but not solely of property value, and the relationship is by no means linear.
Because the selected point in time was one of high property value, the low bands are relatively underpopulated in expensive parts of the country, reducing the distinction between the tax on the average and most expensive properties in those areas.
Anyway, I came to this article looking for something else, and I don't know enough to fill the section in, but I'm hoping that it will be considered for inclusion.
Removed text
Where is this supposedly happening? This sounds like someone's political gripe. Some references and some context would be useful if anyone thinks it should be included in the article. -- Beland 16:11, 30 April 2006 (UTC)
New Orleans case study
I removed the claim that New Orleans was the second-largest city in the U.S. before the Civil War. In 1860, New York, Philadelphia, Brooklyn, Boston, and Baltimore were all larger. In 1850, the position of New Orleans was the same except it was bigger than Brooklyn. [1] [2] This brings into question the accuracy of the rest of the New Orleans case study. -- Beland 16:46, 30 April 2006 (UTC)
States And Countries With No Property Tax
What countries have no property tax? And what states within federations have no property tax? Zachorious 00:42, 2 July 2006 (UTC) 2013..... Ok,lets review the full country list....00000.00...no property tax!.... Seychelles..... Malta..... Hungary.... Fiji Islands.... Turks and Caicos.... Bahamas...no property tax for Bahamian citizens.... residents and foreigners pay 1% of RE assessed value French Polynesia...Tahiti....very low,or none for corp. holding of RE. St Barts. Dominican Republic very low. Cayman Islands---very low. -- Preceding unsigned comment added by Enedrikisland (talk o contribs) 23:24, 18 November 2013 (UTC)
It's been over a year since the above question was posted. I would love to see an answer to this.
Is there really no place on the face of this planet where you can actually own real estate? As opposed to just renting it from the local government? (paying money to keep something IS RENTING IMO) Seems a bit unfair that you can't just live on your land without earning money to pay some big strong guy that supposedly knows better than you to let you be. I have done my share of web searching but cannot find ANY place whatsoever with no property taxes. [[**I am intervening on this and presume that this intervention will be deleted. Humans were free at one time with no need for one another, independent to focus on basics, those bring life and serenity and health, while eventually humans realized that they owe life of their own and thousands of other species to the sun which gives life to the earth to feed the species and to sex which allows the species to reproduce and so humans began to worship these two things, symbols of which are throughout religion today. Humans also are defective because as the human brain evolved so did a thing called ego, or a most perverse mechanism of preservation of the self schema. This may be because humans saw themselves dressed in clothes and self reflected on other issues as well, and when juxtaposed to nature and other species felt inferior. This ego led to a need to control others, while at the same time a need to find something more to make humans feel special as if the sun and sex were not enough. You can take the analysis from there enter recorded history 5000 bce or so, enter religion, and things become clear. They have NATO and its mission is "keeping the peace in times of political unrest" therefore its mission is to police the people, and yes property tax means you are not allowed to live free and worship the sun and sex, while in Greece an ancient fascist state though property tax is relatively new, they still had income tax even if you were on your deathbed earning no income. While in this context it becomes interesting to consider why the war on drugs, since the cocaine capitals of the world Medellin Bogota Lima etc, are tranquil happy towns with polite and good people. And why are people being thrown into jail for smuggling out a kilo of cocaine while tons and tons of cocaine travel around the earth "secured". It is because on the one hand drugs, are not only a right under the sun as it is to fuck and cultivate land with no dependency on others, but drugs also free people and later the consciousness in positive ways so long as not abused, and of course there is no reason to abuse them but for the taboo the governments/traffickers have created, by showing the results of abuse of both innocent drugs like cocaine and heroin but also their own devise of evil drugs which rot the body and kill. At the same time drugs present an excellent way to throw everyone in jail for essentially nothing, which is another agenda and so yes, they want them out there, but also they don't. So you see? Revolution? Against NATO? The U.S. invited Russian troops to prepare for a civil unrest, while Europe is well guarded by NATO? To close, if your very most fundamental basic right under the sun has been deprived, what more do you think may have been deprived? Do you see why nothing you know speak or hear is real?
Now, I understand that municipalities generally rely upon property tax, the most reliable of all taxes (it's pretty hard to hide your property) to fund police and emergency services and other "necessary" functions of gov't, but why can't one sign an agreement to forfeit these services in return for less or no property tax, effectively becoming a small self-contained, self policed country with a controlled border? I don't have AS much of a problem with income, sales taxes etc., but forcing people to either contribute to the economy or lose their property equals slavery, IMHO. --Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.57.36.67 (talk) 06:12, 9 October 2007 (UTC)
Malta is a no property tax country, not to mention very beautiful!
--Preceding unsigned comment added by 164.67.237.80 (talk) 08:51, 21 October 2008 (UTC)
I'm pretty sure you don't pay property taxes in the Cayman Islands. Cooltobekind (talk) 22:07, 21 October 2008 (UTC)
In the U.S., all states authorize local governments to levy a property tax. In Alaska, it is optional for municipalities, and not all municipalities have opted in. Similarly, in Maine, all municipalities can levy a property tax, but not all of the state is within a municipality. Outside of the municipal areas, the state implements the property tax. Nya gwu (talk) 19:19, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
The country of Hungary currently has NO property taxes. I believe if you look at the former Soviet Satellites you will find many countries with no property taxes. They are discussing it, but with so many people on fixed incomes, and a low per capita GDP, it did not go over too well. As to the other comments above... Land "ownership" is an illusion. As an example, don't pay your property taxes for 2 years in the state of florida and your land will start the process of being sold on a tax deed. if you truly owned the land, you would be billed for your services and it would be a civil collections matter... Instead it is an asset forfeiture action... like a car repossession. They are nice enough to send you a check for whatever money is left over after the taxes are paid (like a car repossession). --Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.32.247.171 (talk) 22:20, 1 April 2011 (UTC)
Places that use personal property tax in the US
http://evans-legal.com/dan/papptax.html
We really should include some of this information in here. I don't know if North Carolina and Pennsylvania are the only two states that do/have done this, but it should be researched. I think this should could probably be made into a separate article or perhaps even combined with the [wealth tax] page.
Jesse Crouch (talk) 09:26, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
I have at least part of the answer to that question. I know all of the states' provisions for taxing mobile homes, motor vehicles, inventory, and machinery and equipment. New page? Nya gwu (talk) 05:04, 14 December 2008 (UTC)
IS PROPERTY TAX REGRESSIVE?
Property tax can be the most regressive tax possible. It taxes someone even if they have no income giving it a potential tax rate that approaches infinity. It's also regressive in that it directly taxes only those with taxable property. For example, I know some one who lives in a home with a taxable value of 300,000 dollars with a tax rate of 2.8%.He has an income of 25,000 dollars. He must pay the state about a dollar an hour to live in his home or about 34% of his income. He also must pay the sales tax and all the other taxes. The only way to make property tax progressive would be to link it to a persons income and if we are going to do this one has to wonder why don't we just replace it with a state income tax that would be shared by everyone and people would no longer have to live with the threat of the government taking their homes. --Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.18.159.83 (talk) 05:49, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
Property tax not only taxes you if you have no income it is the only tax that forces you to make money for the state or they will take your property. Property tax prohibits the poor and those without continuous wealth from keeping expensive property creating a society where highly appraised land can only be possessed by the rich. This makes our society a cast system that effectively prohibits the poor from having property. Ownership becomes a concept of privilege that is only allowed if you're continually wealthy.
There are many ways in which a poor person could acquire expensive property, but because of property tax there are no ways they can keep it. Property tax goes way beyond just being regressive from a monetary prospective, it is a statement by the government that unless you have continuous monetary wealth you have no "place" in our society. --Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.31.107.143 (talk) 06:05, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
"Nyh" You have got to be kidding me. You say, "Also, it's silly that you say that property taxes are regressive, because their whole intention is to be *progressive*:" Wow! You're saying intentions create fact. So, if I have every intention of having the best theory of gravity it must be true. Einstein move over I'm the smartest person in the world. Have you ever heard the saying," the road to hell is paved with good intentions"? Your statement is beyond silly it's irrational.
If someone wins the lottery they are not poor. If someone is forced to try and sell where they live because they can't pay the taxes it only proves the previous comments are right and you are wrong. It doesn't matter what the result "could" be. Such arguments as yours are sophistry. Some one living in a shack with an annual income of a million dollars would pay almost no property tax while some one living in a house taxed at 5000 dollars a year with no income would have a tax rate that approaches infinity ..... How is this not regressive?
Whether a tax is progressive or regressive is based on the percentage of your income you pay relative to the income you make. It is a pure and simple mathematical FACT that some one with no income having to pay property tax has the highest tax rate possible. It is also a pure mathematically FACT that this means property tax is potentially the most regressive tax possible.
The facts are clearly stated by people making comments before you and you failed miserably trying to distort what they said. Just look at the first statement, "Property tax CAN BE the most regressive tax possible"; that you are apparently incapable of understanding the logic of that statement is simply astonishing.
The rich almost always pay more but this fact alone has almost nothing to do with a tax being progressive. If you had a situation where all those making under 15,000 dollars a year were taxed at 80% and those making over 600,000 dollars a year were only taxed at 20% the rich would still be paying over 10times what the poor pay yet this would be about the most regressive tax imaginable. It should be obvious to any rational person that just because the rich pay more does not make a tax progressive and the reason property tax is so regressive is that it is based on the government monetary appraisal of the land and not the income of the person living there. --Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.131.92.28 (talk) 17:23, 25 January 2011 (UTC)
Comments about Taxation Page
I think it needs to have a sample like start-to-finish of it. For instance, you receive Tax Statements in March 2009 for taxes assessed to be assessed in 2009. Then, you appeal by a deadline (usually April 30, 2009). Then, you appeal it by April 30. Go before a board and present arguments. Then, you are either agruments are accepted or declined. Raising or lowering your taxes.
But, I also want to know if the taxes are post-paid or pre-paid. People want to know if you are paying January 31, 2009 due date of taxes. Is that for post-payment of 2008 taxes or pre-payemnts of 2009 taxes. That was not clear.
Those are some changes I immediately and roughly see. --Preceding unsigned comment added by DavidBlaineFullerton (talk o contribs) 09:38, 18 May 2009 (UTC)
The required revenue is not reliable.
The article says "The property tax always produces the required revenue for municipalities' tax levies." Not so, many cities and counties experience large shortfalls in the actual payments received, due to owners who cannot be found, or who just don't pay, and the like. Homeowners who have mortgages must pay, because the mortgagor collects the taxes as escrow and pays the government on time. Other owners may not pay, and while the government can theoretically sell the real estate and deduct the taxes, sometimes the property is not worth nearly as much as the taxes and penalties due.
The current article is not realistic, but I am unsure where comments like mine above should go in a general article. Also, getting appropriate sources may be difficult. --DThomsen8 (talk) 21:58, 29 May 2009 (UTC)
While this i strictly speaking true, compared to any other form of taxation the revenue is far more reliable. Also, depending on past experience a factor can be built into the budget to account for the anticipated shortfalls. --Hwaxman (talk) 15:46, 13 September 2009 (UTC)
Add link to Bath School disaster
Could you add a link to the Bath School disaster which was caused by property tax? "The perpetrator was school board member Andrew Kehoe, who was upset by a property tax that had been levied to fund the construction of the school building. He blamed the additional tax for financial hardships which led to foreclosure proceedings against his farm." Stars4change (talk) 05:47, 12 November 2009 (UTC)
Intangible assets
This article lists stocks and bonds as "intangible assets." That's not accurate, at least in the context of corporate terminology. I didn't edit it because maybe I'm not familiar with another use of intangible assets, and also I'm not sure exactly what they're getting at with the phrase, but that definitely can't stay ... --Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.20.190.133 (talk) 20:26, 28 September 2010 (UTC)
Actually
Actually, from what I can tell, in most U.S. jurisdictions "personal property taxes" specifically exempt intangible assets. --Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.20.190.133 (talk) 20:31, 28 September 2010 (UTC)
"some characteristics or attributes of property, even though intangible, may be considered in establishing the taxable value of tangible property." WAC 458-50-160
It is still uncertain until approved by the state then, correct? In other-words this is not the end all regardless. -- Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.26.107.163 (talk) 22:08, 6 August 2011 (UTC)
Tax levy and tax levies
I notice that "Tax levy" redirects to this article, while "Tax levies" is a separate article. This seems to be a problem.
The term "tax levy" can mean two different things. First, it can mean the imposition of the tax. In this sense, the term "tax levy" is simply the concept covered in the article entitled Tax. In this sense, "tax levy" should not redirect to this article on "Property tax," as a "tax levy" in this sense can be ANY kind of tax, not just a property tax.
In the second sense, a tax levy is a seizure of property by the government to satisfy a tax liability. The article "Tax levies" is the article covering this meaning of the term.
A few minutes ago, I entered the phrase "tax levy", intending to find the material covered by the second sense. It took a while to find the correct article: Tax levies.
I don't think "tax levy" should redirect to the article on Property tax at all. I think there should be a disambiguation for this term, with one alternative going to the article on Tax and the other alternative going to Tax levies.
Thoughts, anyone? Famspear (talk) 05:32, 10 March 2011 (UTC)
Can't actually own land, you just rent it from government
Deleted because it is uncited? Hmm, I think we could delete 90% of this article as uncited then.
I will leave this here instead, while I look around for citations.
DMahalko (talk) 14:27, 7 July 2011 (UTC)
It's so obvious that a perpetual property tax prohibits ownership that nothing in history comes close to the hypocrisy of calling those subject to property tax home owners. The American Dream of homeownership is the greatest lie ever told. When someone or government can punish or take what is supposed to be yours if you don't pay them they have converted ownership into slavery. The taxing of ownership is best definition of slavery ever devised.
I see no difference in principal from being forced to make cotton under the threat of a beating and being forced to make money under the threat of being made homeless except we are no longer prisoners on the plantation.
The ruling class has simply wised up and come to realize that slaves are more productive if you don't make them prisoners. They no longer threaten to beat the slaves but to make them homeless if they cant pay for what they want. -- Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.131.85.212 (talk) 13:26, 17 March 2012 (UTC)
How about some practical, i.e. real-life examples ?
Hello,
I am a German citizen and wanted some information about Canadian property taxes. The article explains it all in theoretical terms, but how does it look in practice ? Could somebody please insert practical examples, e.g. a $150,000.-- house in Québec, Ontario, and other states, and what the owner would actually have to pay per year to the state ? Does the state actually tax the current market value ? In Germany, you would pay sth. like $150.-- per year in taxes for a 150,000.-- house. -- Alexey Topol (talk) 19:18, 7 November 2011 (UTC)
Property Tax and Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Since all the nations under the UN (United Nations organization) recognized and adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, signed in New York on the 10th of December of the year 1948, this declaration has to be regarded as a fundamental set of articles that cannot be opposed by any national law.
We learn from it, by art. 17 that there is a right to "own property alone as well as in association with others".
Art. 25 recites clearly that "Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control". So the right to housing still stands also in the event of an economical standstill.
As for eviction from one's own house, on the grounds of property tax default, art. 5 comes in aid stating that "No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment". Unless, being rendered homeless is not considered a degrading treatment.
Mathematically a property tax can only be sustained by means of another line of earnings since property alone is not liable to output any revenue on its own. It would only be natural to impose a tax on the real income of people, safeguarding their rights and belongings in crucial moments of life.
Unless, a more general scheme of latent slavery has to be referred to, as inferred earlier on this page, which has been merely misnamed by calling it ownership. But then slavery strikes of course hollering contrast with art. 4 of the Declaration: "No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms". Gabriel Serrelli 18:23, 19 January 2013 (UTC) -- Preceding unsigned comment added by Gabriel Serrelli (talk o contribs)
I appreciate your contribution in assessing the nature of the tax with its compliance, or rather, its lack of violation of any of the Declaration rights. I'll retain this information should I ever make a comment in that direction.
The matter is, however, on the righteousness of its effects when it becomes a means of property eviction in consideration that the purpose of taxes is "to pay the Debts and provide... the general Welfare of the United States". If the general Welfare of a Nation implies rendering homeless its own citizens because they cannot afford to pay a tax that should lead them to prosperity, there is certainly a subtle line of irony if not absurdity. And, possibly, it is this that comes into conflict with the rights of property and well-being depicted in the Declaration.
As for the Declaration, while it is true that no law enforces it, it is also true that the United States has adopted it. And its adoption, within the United Nations, makes it binding for any member state. Binding, but then again, with no legal consequences if it's overlooked or ignored. -- Preceding unsigned comment added by Gabriel Serrelli (talk o contribs) 22:13, 19 January 2013 (UTC)
Order
Is this supposed to be in alphabetical order? If so, then Jamaica and Egypt need to be moved... Plokmijnuhbygvtfcdxeszwaq (talk) 01:46, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
History
I believe a great way to improve the article would be to add at least a brief history of how property tax came to be. Here is what I had added, which got removed: "Historically, the American real estate tax has its origins in old England where funds were raised for the purpose of supporting military expeditions. The tax known as Danegeld was equivalent to 2 shillings per each 100 acres. It was first imposed during the year 868. From that time on, it was imposed whenever someone needed to be conquered. The property tax became so important that the concept was addressed in the Magna Carta. From England to the Colonies, the concept eventually came to be looked upon favorably as a stable and predictable source of revenue. The property tax has been referred to as the price of civilization." Analyst1234 (talk) 17:03, 28 July 2015 (UTC)
- ^ BM-2cX8zEFUWL9e1xEKSPrHEWRLi1idcpGMC3@bitmessage.ch
- ^ http://www.propertytax.com/national-tax-information/
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