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On 11/9/2024 4:01 PM, D wrote:When I do my ethical calculation I do not consider separate funds. I consider two accounts, my accounts, and the account of the government. If money flows from my account to the government it is theft. If money returns, it is getting property back. If more money moves from the government than what was stolen from me, I would be the thief, so that would be unethical. So if I paid 0% tax, fees, vat, what ever, I could not accept that money but would have to return it. On the other hand I suspect there is plenty of federal taxes, so that would most likely give me plenty of room to claw back my property without reaching unethical territory.On Sat, 9 Nov 2024, Cryptoengineer wrote:>
On 11/9/2024 8:32 AM, D wrote:It actually might not interfere at all, if Alaska takes my money without my consent in the form of taxes. In that case, it could potentially be return of my property. If I paid no taxes in alaska, then accepting that government handout would be highly unethical, I agree with you there.On Fri, 8 Nov 2024, Scott Dorsey wrote:Alaska, unfortunately for your politics, has a government that
D <nospam@example.net> wrote:Sounds like sweden! No one likes the politics and very different cultures depending on the area you are in.On Fri, 8 Nov 2024, Paul S Person wrote:Oregon is weird because it has a very wide mix of different locations withIdaho.Thank you Paul, that confirms what I have so far been thinking about in
Or Montana.
terms of places to move to. I have also heard good things about Wyoming,
South dakota, and someone, as strange as it may sound, also recommended
the far eastern parts of oregon. Not sure about that one, but that was one
recommendation as well.
very different cultures in the same state and while you might like the
far eastern part, you won't like the state politics as a whole (because
neither side does).
You would like Wyoming if you like long distances with nothing. It isSounds excellent! Since I generally do not like people, being in the middle of nowhere, with a dog or two sounds like heaven! Sadly it is not going to fly with the wife since she wants culture, opera and all that stuff. So I imagine that sadly, in the end, it would have to be 2-3 hours by car from some kind of bigger city. =(
almost the opposite of Europe in terms of just being able to feel like
you are nowhere. I find that pleasant for a while, but not long-term.
You might like Alaska in that Alaska is filled with people who have anAlaska is on my list! I did find anchorageopera.org so maybe that could work! ;)
intense interest in personal independence. Unfortunately it is also
filled with people who have problems who had thought that if they could
just get to Alaska that everything would be fine, and so they brought
their problems with them to Alaska.
interferes in the free market, with a Universal Basic Income
scheme
The state has a $50 billion Permanent Fund, and sends checks
to every resident each year. The amount varies by year,
$1200 - $3000 being typical.
pt
The state of Alaska has no sales or income taxes. The state does tax
some things (rental cars, hotels, etc), mostly to extract money
from tourists. Some towns do have a sales tax.
>
But those permanent fund checks come from the state of Alaska, to which
residents pay nothing.
>
pt
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