I am arguing this from a secular position. I don’t need a Church to teach me basically what is right and wrong.
You need the Church to help you form your conscience.
Since you brought it up…as to “radically redefining the meaning of one of the Commandments”…what part of “thou shalt not steal” do you intend to radically redefine?
None. I define it in the same way it has been defined for as long as it’s been defined at all, as far as I can see: as the action of one private person in taking unlawfully the goods of another. It has never before been applied to the actions of lawgivers who have charge of the common good.
A case can be made that the modern state is uniquely disqualified as the guardian of the common good. This argument has best been made by William Cavanaugh, in my opinion. But that seems different from your position.
You have yet to argue for your definition of theft, which is a patently novel one.
The fact is that during the middle ages **civil law **recognized and enforced the collection of tithes. This lead to abuses by princes and nobles, and was settled by Third Council of Lateran.
No, it continued at least until the Reformation, and I believe until the French Revolution and its counterparts/imitators in other countries.
Well then, what’s the Church doing that a secular government can’t do?
The question here is not whether a voluntary government is possible, but whether the use of coercion to exact taxation is theft. It has never been defined so, that I know of.
Gee…that sounds more like Karl Marx than Thomas Aquinas.
It is a paraphrase of Aquinas. I can’t help the fact that Aquinas is more like Marx than you would like him to be. I don’t think that they are the same at all, by the way. Aquinas is not, for instance, an egalitarian (his view of distributive justice would give considerably more to kings and nobles than to peasants), and he believes that private property is an excellent and just arrangement. But it is an arrangement whose purpose is the common good. It is not an end in itself and not an absolute right. This is simply common knowledge. I am not responsible for your ignorance of Catholic tradition. You can find Aquinas’ concept of distributive justice
here, and his view of property and theft
here. Note for instance this from Question 66, Article 8 (the second link):
Robbery implies a certain violence and coercion employed in taking unjustly from a man that which is his. Now in human society no man can exercise coercion except through public authority: and, consequently, if a private individual not having public authority takes another’s property by violence, he acts unlawfully and commits a robbery, as burglars do. As regards princes, the public power is entrusted to them that they may be the guardians of justice: hence it is unlawful for them to use violence or coercion, save within the bounds of justice–either by fighting against the enemy, or against the citizens, by punishing evil-doers: and whatever is taken by violence of this kind is not the spoils of robbery, since it is not contrary to justice. On the other hand to take other people’s property violently and against justice, in the exercise of public authority, is to act unlawfully and to be guilty of robbery; and whoever does so is bound to restitution.
Reply to Objection 3. It is no robbery if princes exact from their subjects that which is due to them for the safe-guarding of the common good, even if they use violence in so doing: but if they extort something unduly by means of violence, it is robbery even as burglary is. Hence Augustine says (De Civ. Dei iv, 4): “If justice be disregarded, what is a king but a mighty robber? since what is a robber but a little king?” And it is written (Ezekiel 22:27): “Her princes in the midst of her, are like wolves ravening the prey.” Wherefore they are bound to restitution, just as robbers are, and by so much do they sin more grievously than robbers, as their actions are fraught with greater and more universal danger to public justice whose wardens they are.
There are several very clear references from theologians, philosophers and popes posted right on this thread that dispute your ideology
I have read the thread and have seen no such thing. Please point me to these references and explain how they contradict anything I have said.
How did pacifism get into this?
Just as an example. Ignore it if it confused you.
Of course I accept the concept of the common good…as long as it meets my standards.
So you are the judge of all things?
Yes, Edwin, ALL taxation is theft.
Do you admit that you are going against the
entire tradition of Catholic moral thought in saying this?
I have shown you where Aquinas explicitly says “It is no robbery if princes exact from their subjects that which is due to them for the safe-guarding of the common good, even if they use violence in so doing.” What theologian in the entire history of the Church can you point to who has said otherwise? (I’m quite aware that Aquinas is not infallible. But he’s immensely important and a great Doctor of the Church. And so far you have nothing–absolutely nothing–to cite on your side.)
Remember we are talking about government taxation here. Taxation that is collected by some form of force is logically…theft.
Putting the word “logically” in a naked assertion does not take the place of actual logic.
Edwin