|
Send to a friend
The State Cannot Donate
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
December 2001
At the first post-9/11 Christmas, perhaps it is appropriate to draw the
distinction between the private and governmental assistance provided to the
families of the World Trade Center victims. The outpouring of support from
the private sector reflected the caring and compassionate nature of the
American people because it came from the willing heart of the individual.
The U.S. government, scurrying to appear to be caring and compassionate too,
also "donated" large amounts of money. But the government money doesn't
reflect anything good about either the U.S. government or the American
people. First, the money was taken by force by the IRS, a government agency
that relies primarily on the infliction of terror produced by threats of
audits, confiscations, jail, and other physical and mental abuse. Second,
the distribution of money is authorized and distributed by elected members
of Congress and appointed government bureaucrats, who are attempting to be
good with the money that the IRS has taken by force. Who's the caring and
compassionate person in all this coercive taxation and largess? The answer
is: No one, not even the taxpayer. The more important question is: Who is
morally responsible for the wrongful taking of someone's money for the
purpose of giving it to someone to whom it does not belong?
|