T
TenBobNote
Guest
If a tax is not equally distributed how can it be considered just?
If taxes that occur today like social security, income tax, etc are not equally distributed how can they be moral? If a group of people take the fruits of my labor and distribute them unequally to whoever they think deserves it, they are essentially doing the same thing as me going to my neighbors safe and giving 1/6th of his money to the poor. Taking ones money against their will is immoral, and handing it out to the needy appears to be good, yet how can a moral act come from an immoral one? More so the evidence is clear that government entity’s are almost never efficient with the people’s money, so how can it be moral to waste tax payer’s money on inefficient government programs when institutions such as the Catholic Church can replicate whatever good the government attempts to do, yet make it efficient and with the love of Jesus Christ?
If taxes that occur today like social security, income tax, etc are not equally distributed how can they be moral? If a group of people take the fruits of my labor and distribute them unequally to whoever they think deserves it, they are essentially doing the same thing as me going to my neighbors safe and giving 1/6th of his money to the poor. Taking ones money against their will is immoral, and handing it out to the needy appears to be good, yet how can a moral act come from an immoral one? More so the evidence is clear that government entity’s are almost never efficient with the people’s money, so how can it be moral to waste tax payer’s money on inefficient government programs when institutions such as the Catholic Church can replicate whatever good the government attempts to do, yet make it efficient and with the love of Jesus Christ?