The Bible very clearly states that a 10% tax is tyrannical [and] ... that a government's roles to perform are only three things: protecting it's citizens, infrastructure, and when possible, protecting other.
It does?
Where?
No, it's just me making a posit offered in parts as an act of reason and sustained by authority (Merriam Webster).
Nope.
Webster's doesn't stipulate that it must be your narrative that holds sway.
Choice is a part of that process.
A necessary part.
It eliminates welfare as being charity.
The only difference is you think it can't be charity because every single individual doesn't mark a box that says, "Put X percentage of my tax payments, in sum, into charitable works to help those who are incapable in the moment or longer to help themselves."
Nope.
It's not charity, because it is coerced. And even if welfare was not coerced — which it has to be, regardless of a man's attitude toward it — many times it is not charity, because it is going toward people who do not need it.
And it is irrelevant to describe the nature of your government system. It doesn't matter where the government is that demands tax money for welfare, such action always removes choice.
That's a contrived litmus without any authority whatsoever.
Nope.
Fundamental to the whole process. You think it would be fine to take something by force if the man should be willing to give, but that is a complete perversion of what charity is.
Charity is a man who sees a need and meets it.
That definition covers everything. Your narrative is sunk.
The giving done by those who stand in our place is by extension our own.
If you buy into it, perhaps. But it's rather a cop-out, at best.
It is entered into voluntarily, both in the fashioning of the process at first and the budgeting for its continuance yearly.
Nope.
For those who disagree with welfare, it is most certainly not voluntary. It's not voluntary for those who do, either. And this discussion has nothing to do with a "voluntary" form of government. Charity is not a matter that can be institutionalized; it is a personal thing.
Beyond the clear fact of that and as pertains to the myth of motive, the odd idea that the people protesting welfare are not protesting the charity itself, but the lack of that box...well, it's as peculiar as suggesting that we would not allow our neighbor's house to burn to the ground if permitted the freedom to act, but we begrudge the fire department created to more efficiently and effectively act on our behalf.
Nope.
There are justified functions of government, emergency response being one of them.
You've conflated welfare and charity and you've conflated emergency response with welfare.
This peculiar notion you have that people only refrain from breaking the law under threat of prison is, I believe, largely unsupportable.
Making things up for me to believe will get you nowhere.
At no stage have I said anything remotely like this and nor does it play any part in what I have said. People do not only refrain from lawlessness because of fear of punishment.
People do what the law requires for the most part because a) a law is good and b) people desire to do good and to have good done to them. The root of law really isn't force and threat. The root of law is compassion mixed with a heady dose of self-interest. The harder part is essentially reserved for those who would in the general course of things be inclined to take and do what they want without regard for the rights and well being of others.
You've missed the two crucial factors regarding the law: The law is that which does not contravene God's standards and the first role of the law is to teach people.
Welfare is taking from taxpayers to fund those who will not work; also known as theft.
Hence, it is no law at all.
The right has recognized that for years when it comes to gun crimes, that if you proscribe or compel you don't really tend to impact the felon or the fellow with an evil grudge. You may dissuade lesser thugs or those in the throes of a temptation who can be tempered by reason, but for the most part you're simply prescribing the process for redress and consequence. Or, essentially good citizens follow conscience and that keeps them within the law while those on the margins may be helped, but essentially the law begins to tell everyone what may be done to the breaker and for those damaged by him.
Uhm, yes?
I think public charity is fine for a number of reasons. First, because it does a better job than we can as individuals, as a fire department does a better job than relying on neighbors to do their best as they see it. And secondly, because it does a real, tangible public good.
Conflating emergency response and welfare again. Bad form!
Also, an individual is far more capable of seeing a need and meeting it. A government has to employ people, run background checks, install a bureaucracy.
The man on the street can open his wallet and get it all done in a few seconds. Governments tie up thousands of people, create endless regulations and waste millions.
Welfare is not charity for the reasons given and met with a denial.
Some begrudge it and therefore remove the voluntary from it.
Nope. Anything done with legal consequences attached is coerced, not voluntary.
Well, that's met in my reasons to begin with. Beyond that is the case to be made that a) more people than not begrudge welfare and b) that leaders of government are failing their duty to represent that majority. To which I'd answer if and when that is the case the simple remedy is found in a ballot and everyone concerned has access to it.
This is just a cop-out. If you want the discussion, have it. Quit pretending I have to start voting to be part of this.
It's one form, again. And you can say as readily that when any man elects those to do his will and those men act charitably they have...wait for it....seen a need and met it, creating and addressing it as an act of public charity on our behalf and in our name.
Nonsense. Given this approach, you could literally vote for anyone and pretend you are being charitable.
No, your acting illustration of a man meeting a need does, but that was never a part of the contest except as you attempted to restrict charity to it, which neither Websters nor reason will.
I'm not dependent on Webster's restricting charity to my definition. My case is built upon a common-sense analysis — and my definition encompasses all of what Webster's might say — while the dictionary definition only helps you because it skirts ideas of the willingness of the participant.
I omit a problem of yours that were I to note it would distract and upset you.