A few random thoughts:
Taxes are theft. Even if the social planner believes he is doing good by spending other people's money, it is still other people's money.
But even if you don't believe in private property, taxes inhibit economic growth. They take money out of the private, productive, entrepreneurial sector and flood the public, bureaucratic, destructive sector.
But even if you don't care about long term growth, taxes distort markets. They impose costs on either buyers or sellers (depending on how you look at it and how the tax is set up) that disfigure market signals like prices and quantities of output into meaninglessness.
But even if you don't care about markets and trust the government instead, to believe increasing taxes will increase government revenue, you must be making an assumption that our economy is operating on the left side of the Laffer curve.
But, even if we grant you that we are on the left side of the Laffer curve, and increasing taxes will increase government revenue, then you still must prove that that money is better spent by a bureaucrat (who was probably appointed by somebody *cough*friendsandfamily*cough* elected by lying to the citizenry) than an entrepreneur motivated by profit opportunity.
If you are still on board, then you are telling people "You do not have the right to earn/have/save/spend your own money because I can vote for people that know how to spend your money better than you."
...which means that it takes a person of great delusions of grandeur and intelligence to think that taxes are a moral and beneficial thing in a supposedly free and prosperous society.
I'm sorry Newman, but this post is ridiculous in just about every way possible.
"Taxes are theft".
Anyone past about the age of 5 can understand why taxation is not "theft". ... If they wanted to understand, I mean.
"Taxes inhibit economic growth".
Taxation inhibits the income of some as it provides an income for others. And in the meantime, it builds roads and bridges and all kinds of physical and social infrastructure that EVERYONE needs to increase their economic condition.
"Taxes distort markets".
Once we get past our absurd worship of the sacred 'markets' we might begin to recognize that not every commercial endeavor is desirable or even viable. Much of the stuff we produce in this country we don't really need, and if the cost of producing it (after paying taxes, and a decent wage, and for a safe work environment, etc.) is too high, then we probably shouldn't be producing it at all. Because the fact is that the well being of the people involved in its production is more important than most of the junk we produce for the market. Market profits are not gods that must be served at any and all social or human cost.
"You still must prove that that money is better spent by a bureaucrat".
As opposed to whom? We live in a representative democracy. That means we elect people to represent us regarding decisions as to who pays taxes, how much they pay, and what the money is spent on. If we don't like their decisions, we can always elect someone else. And given that most people re-elect the same people they elected the last time, we must assume that they are OK with the decisions their representatives have been making.
If you are assuming that people should keep the tax money and decide for themselves how to spend it, well, that's patently absurd. We are all far too selfish and short sighted to ever spend our own money on things that we need as a collective society, and this has been proven true since the dawn of humankind.
"You are telling people, "You do not have the right to earn/have/save/spend your own money because I can vote for people that know how to spend your money better than you."
Grown ups understand that they live in a society of human beings, to which their own well-being is integrally connected. Grown ups understand that when their tax dollars are spent on roads that they will never or rarely ever actually travel on, that it's still a positive use of the money because the mobility those roads provide for others, helps everyone in the end. This is why grown ups band together and form governments and endow those governments with the power to collect taxes and spend that money on things that a selfish individual would never pay for, but that society as a whole needs and wants to survive and thrive. Grown ups recognize their own flaws, and so understand why this must be done.
If a child were made to pay taxes, he would likely cry and whine about how his money is being "stolen" from him because he has no sense of his responsibilities as members of any larger group of people. All he thinks about is himself. And what he wants. And what he thinks belongs only to him.
But as we grow up we must learn that we are not each the little kings of our own little universes. We are in fact just one member within a whole group of people like ourselves who's lives and well-being are all tied to each other. And that the decisions we make will effect others, just as the decisions other's make will effect us. Learning to be an adult means learning to think about the welfare of the whole group, as well as our own.
Sadly, it's a lesson that has not been taught very well, lately, in the United States. There are a lot of spoiled children running around in adult bodies, behaving like they're little baby kings of their own little baby universes, owing nothing to anyone, and whining and crying like 5 year olds because someone else has taken away one of "their" toys.